To most Americans, Abraham Lincoln is a monolithic figure, the Great Emancipator and Savior of the Union, beloved by all. In Gore Vidal's Lincoln we meet Lincoln the man and Lincoln the political animal, the president who entered a besieged capital where most of the population supported the South and where even those favoring the Union had serious doubts that the man from Illinois could save it. Far from steadfast in his abhorrence of slavery, Lincoln agonizes over the best course of action and comes to his great decision only when all else seems to fail. As the Civil War ravages his nation, Lincoln must face deep personal turmoil, the loss of his dearest son, and the harangues of a wife seen as a traitor for her Southern connections. Brilliantly conceived, masterfully executed, Gore Vidal's Lincoln allows the man to breathe again.
Rebecca Solnit is a writer, historian, and activist.
@sedakayim @HistoryNed Just weird to me that people would think it was a reliable source. Like reading Gore Vidal's Lincoln as a biography!
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Happy birthday to Gore Vidal, American #writer and public intellectual! He wrote Lincoln and Burr. https://t.co/YZKxPkXaOP
Historian and Author. I tweet facts that happened on This Day in History at 8:30 AM (GMT). it’s a daily journey to educate and entertain. I’m only on Twitter.
3 October 1925. Gore Vidal was born in West Point, New York, USA. He was an acclaimed novelist and intellectual. His erudite novels often explored the nature of corruption in public life and include: The City and the Pillar, Julian, Myra Breckinridge, Burr, and Lincoln. https://t.co/3B7icyquXc
"A portrait of America's great president that is at once intimate and public, stark and complex, and that will become for future generations the living Lincoln, the definitive Lincoln. . . . Richly entertaining . . . history lessons with the blood still hot." --The Washington Post
"[Lincoln] is in Vidal's version at once more complex, mysterious and enigmatic, more implacably courageous and, finally, more tragic than the conventional images, the marble man of the memorial. He is honored in the book." --Chicago Tribune