What I'm Reading Now:
Monday, November 13, 2017
Alexander Hamilton
Title: Alexander Hamilton
Author: Ron Chernow
Pages: 731
Genre: Biography
Grade: A-
Synopsis: Alexander Hamilton was born and orphaned in the Caribbean before he made his way to New York City in his late teens where he worked hard to get into college and study to become a lawyer. Eventually he lands on George Washington's staff during the Revolutionary War and eventually lands a role in Washington's first cabinet. The rest is history, although with so many twists and turns and ups and downs that you can barely believe it.
My Review: Alexander Hamilton has a story fit for a musical. And after reading this book a hip-hop inspired musical came to mind, before I found out that Lin Manuel Miranda had beat me to it. Oh well. While I didn't feel that this biography was quite as good as those written by David McCullough, it was still a fantastic piece of work.
From the Book: "(pg. 481) Whatever his disappointments, Hamilton, forty, must have left Philadelphia with an immense feeling of accomplishment. The Whiskey Rebellion had been suppressed, the country's finances flourished, and the investigation into his affairs had ended with a ringing exoneration. He had prevailed in almost every major program he had sponsored--whether the bank, assumption, funding the public debt, the tax system, the Customs Service, or the Coast Guard--despite years of complaints and bitter smears. John Quincy Adams later stated that his financial system "operated like enchantment for the restoration of public credit." Bankrupt when Hamilton took office, the United States now enjoyed a credit rating equal to that of any European nation. He had laid the groundwork for both liberal democracy and capitalism and helped to transform the role of the president from passive administrator to active policy maker, creating the institutional scaffolding for America's future emergence as a great power. He had demonstrated the creative uses of government and helped to weld the states irreversibly into one nation. He had also defended Washington's administration more brilliantly that anyone else, articulating its constitutional underpinnings and enunciating key tenets of foreign policy. "We look in vain for a man who, in an equal space of time, has produced such direct and lasting effects upon our institutions and history," Henry Cabot Lodge was to contend. Hamilton's achievements were never matched because he was present at the government's inception, when he could draw freely on a blank slate. If Washington was the father of the country and Madison the father of the Constitution, then Alexander Hamilton was surely the father of the American government."
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