American Patriarch
The Life of George Washington
-
- Pedido anticipado
-
- Se espera: 12 may 2026
-
- $199.00
-
- Pedido anticipado
-
- $199.00
Descripción editorial
From historian and Pulitzer Prize finalist H. W. Brands comes an inspiring portrait of George Washington that examines his unrivaled leadership in the birth of America.
“With this masterly volume, Brands has further solidified his standing as one of our nation’s greatest historians. American Patriarch is by turns brilliant and bold. ”
—Justin Vaughn, founder and director of the Presidential Greatness Project
From his early military career and role among the Virginia gentry, to his leadership during the American Revolution and reluctant return to public service as the first president of the United States, American Patriarch brings to life the man who was called on time and again by his peers to lead.
With a dazzling cast of characters—from the French and Indians on the Ohio frontier; to the Marquis de Lafayette, Benedict Arnold, and Baron von Steuben on the revolutionary battlefield; to Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton locked in conflict during his presidency—American Patriarch casts Washington as the icon of American virtue who wrested America free from British control, gave credibility to the Constitution, and crafted the norms that would steady America as a nation for generations to follow.
Arriving in time for the 250th anniversary of American independence, this is a masterful portrait of Washington as the unrivaled leader of his times.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Historian Brands (America First) examines George Washington's life with an eye to uncovering what gave him his unique character in this immersive biography. Brands tracks how the resourcefulness, bravery, decisiveness, and diligence of a talented young officer who " war invigorating and seductive" morphed into the signature mix of authority and modesty of the general who famously accepted command of the Continental army while proclaiming his unworthiness, and who possessed an almost preternatural ability to inspire while exhibiting an extreme devotion to duty. These traits led Washington to relinquish power not once but twice—first giving up his command of the army at the end of the war, and then again giving up the presidency after two terms—inspiring the fledgling nation with confidence in the soundness of its republican ideals. In Brands's assessment, Washington was painfully self-aware that his every move set a precedent—he wasn't a creature of pure instinct—but, on the other hand, the gentlemanly disinterest at the bedrock of his persona was partly a product of his aristocratic upbringing. A passage depicting Washington's idle handling of the fates of his slaves showcases the unsettling side of such a disinterested persona, though Brands doesn't peer too far into those depths. This detailed character study reveals a Washington who manifested his own myth.