Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Always Balanced... But Always Entertaining, December 31, 2002
Thomas Fleming's "Duel" paints history with broad, vivid, and colorful strokes and gives to the history a certain drama and interaction that makes it an engaging product to the reader.However, the reader should be forewarned that the account given to the times of Hamilton and Burr is not (always) balanced. Fleming's open and articulated biases make it hard for the reader to accept "Duel" as an "objective" piece of history. With that said, there are some real gems to be found in this book. Fleming's account of the genesis and execution of the Sedition Act is incredible. Also of great worth was Fleming's account of Hamilton's libel appeal before New York State's highest court. Until that time, TRUTH could not be asserted as a defense in a libel prosecution. Fleming illuminates this with great detail. Many reviewers find sympathy with Aaron Burr, who has commonly been portrayed as a villain. Fleming does a lot of heavy lifting to rehabilitating Burr's historical character, but Fleming also leaves some of Burr's deceit intact (Burr's dreams of ruling a Western Empire). What I find curious is that many reviewers felt little sympathy for Alexander Hamilton. While it is true that Fleming's account does portray Hamilton as a washed-up Federalist, it is important to note that (generally) ANY Federalist after 1800 was a washed-up Federalist. The Federalist fall after 1800 was sudden and complete. Fleming portrays Hamilton as having many admirable qualities (i.e. intelligence, diligence, a desire to re-invent himself - at least religiously, etc.) The real villainry in Fleming's work is reserved for Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson is the mythical "Founding Father" that takes the hardest (deserved?) fall. All in all, "Duel" is an engaging read and highly recommended - even with its apparent drawbacks.
|
|
|
40 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Burr Under Hamilton's Saddle?, February 2, 2000
"Duel" by Thomas Fleming is a seductive and complex account of the final phase of the political struggle between President Jefferson, his Federalist nemesis, Alexander Hamilton, and one of the supreme villains of the early American republic, Aaron Burr, the almost-president. Unusual in its perspective that tells very little, only what is necessary, about Jefferson and Hamilton's Revolutionary War days, the book portrays Jefferson very unsympathetically, perhaps with reason, as a backstage political manipulator who does his dirty work through proxies while suavely staying above the fray. From the newspaper editor he suborns to libel George Washington, to his campaign to undermine Burr in his quest for new political life after Jefferson engineers his ouster from the 1804 national ticket, Jefferson emerges as a very modern politician, hardly the marble figure overlooking the Tidal Basin. Fleming's view of Jefferson is very close to the portrait painted by Gore Vidal in his fictional autobiography, "Burr," years ago, and which was also, incidentally, a very good read. As a sometime sympathizer of Burr, whose supposed villainy, at least before his unfortunate Western adventure, is never really explained here or elsewhere, I appreciated Fleming's balanced account, which made clear that Hamilton, not Burr was the instigator of the duel. There is an echo of Clinton (William J., not George or DeWitt) in the book, but who is it? Is it Hamilton, the pillar of financial rectitude who, having saved the finances of the Republic, has to toil all night by candlelight to earn enough money to support his family, as Talleyrand remarks in wonder to his friends, but who is so delusional that he sees himself as persecuted when he reveals devastatingly lurid personal correspondence with his paramour to prove his involvement with her was not pecuniary? Or is it Burr, who appears even in this sympathetic portrayal to be somewhat at the mercy of the latest wave of public opinion and who sems to find nothing inimical about secession, a prospect that Hamilton fights against despite his loathing of Jefferson? Or is it Jefferson himself, who schemes and politics to destroy his opponents behind the scenes? This was fascinating book, that moved rivetingly to the climax, with vividly drawn characters and a wealth of fascinating detail. A few minor cavils--Fleming repeatedly refers to American "ambassadors" abroad and the British "ambassador" to the U.S> even though American diplomats even into the late 19th Century only carried the rank of Minister. The references to "General" Hamilton were also jarring at times, but I put this down to a desire to convey to the reader how Hamilton was in fact addressed daily at the time. An interesting side speculation-- the exact insult that triggered the final fateful meeting at Weehawken may never be known, but Vidal says in his fictional work that Hamilton told his friends that Burr had slept with his own daughter, Theodosia! Read this book!
|
|
|
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Compelling Story of 3 Gifted But Flawed Individuals, October 29, 1999
By A Customer
When I used to think of early Federalist America and had to pick a villain, I unhestatingly would say "Aaron Burr." However after reading this sweeping (and at times hard to follow) book, I have a certain sympathy for Burr, a little less respect for Alexander Hamilton (whom the author constantly and annoyingly refers to as "General Hamilton" eventhough he never really commanded troops as a General) and a whole lot less respect for Thomas Jefferson who it now appears was a failure as war time Governor of Virginia and was overrated and weak as a President. Burr though comes across as hardly a saint. One of the best features of this book is to show the reader that secession (which one thinks of purely in terms of the Confederacy and the Civil War) was actually a very real prospect as New England and the (Mid) Western territories constantly spoke about breaking away from the dominace of Virginia. Burr's actions after the fateful year of 1804 did border on treason as well as his Napoleonic delusions of grandeur in Mexico, Texas and Louisiana reveal a conspiratorial side to him that is decidedly unattractive. Alexander Hamilton comes across as a washed up Federalist has-been who if not for his "martyrdom" that July morning on Weehawken Heights, would be reagrded with less enthusiams by latter historians. (I aslo learned that Hamilton's son was killed in a duel a few years earlier). Fleming tells a good story, unfortuantely it does get hard after a while to remember all the names he throws at you, and what the people stood for. Nevertheless I found it for all its 408 pages, a fast read as the inevitable climax to the Burr-Hamilton (and Jefferson) feud comes to fruition on July 11, 1804. As a resident of New York City, I also enjoyed Fleming's description of New York.
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|