Reviews
"Absorbing." Barbara Ehrenreich,New York Times Book Review "Almost every page forces you to think hard, and in new ways, about American violence, American history, and what used to be called the American character." Adam Gopnik,The New Yorker "Splendidly written . . . the reader is led carefully by the author, who builds the story and lets the readers draw their own conclusions about Brown and his actions . . . Reynolds is that rarest of authors who knows how to write well and who successfully presents a life-size image of Brown, warts and all." Brian Richard Boylan,Denver Post " This well-researched book . . . peels away some of the extreme interpretations of Brown and offers a generally balanced and objective assessment of why he should matter." Robert Joiner,St. Louis Post-Dispatch "Great sensitivity, thorough research, and some marvelous narrative." David W. Blight,Washington Post Book World "A rich, nuanced and exhaustively researched 'life and times' that positions the abolitionist firmly in the context of 19th century American culture . . . impeccably written." Chuck Leddy,San Francisco Chronicle "A masterful exploration of a fascinating, flawed character and his cultural impact." Cameron McWhirter,Atlanta Journal-Constitution "Absorbing, well written and beautifully documented." Martin Duberman,The Nation Advance Praise "Nobody could save John Brown from the gallows in Charles Town Virginia, on December 2, 1859, but David Reynolds dazzlingly rescues him from misreadings in American history occupying the extremes of the spectrum from Brown as a Christ martyred in the abolitionist cause to Brown as a cruel and wanton terrorist. Reynolds' scholarly but vivid life is truly thrilling in the way it peels away the overpainting of 150 years to reveal the old-style Puritan whose soul went marching on into the Civil War and the end of slavery." Sir Harold Evans, author ofThe American Century "A thoroughly researched, eloquently articulated study by America's foremost cultural biographer. The book relates Brown's militant abolitionism to contemporary cultural forces, to the Garrisonians, to Nat Turner and other slave revolts, to the legacy of New England Puritanism, and to prominent Transcendental abolitionists like Emerson and Thoreau. Reynolds defends John Brown's place in history without apologizing for his actions, andJohn Brown, Abolitionistis the most important work on John Brown ever written." Mason I. Lowance, Jr., author ofA House Divided: The Antebellum Slavery Debates in America, 1776-1865 "John Brown, Abolitionist presents the most complete portrait to date of one of the nation's most enigmatic figuresat once a messianic rebel, a terrorist, and a folk heroand the war for black freedom he helped to catalyze." Eric J. Sundquist, author ofTo Wake the Nations: Race in the Making of American Literature "A brilliant study of the Puritan abolitionist, John Brown, whose rigid morality and calculated use of brutality defied the non-violent methods of conventional abolitionists. An American radical who recognized the tactical power of terror, Brown plotted his famous raids methodically, resolving to become the spark that triggered the the Civil War." Cynthia Griffin Wolff, author ofEmily Dickinson "Was John Brown a fan