Category Archives: book reviews

The Egyptian News, The Greek News, The Roman News

Just published this week – three new reference works for children on Egypt, Greece, & Rome.

Each is built around a clever premise, very well executed. These three full-color glossy paperbacks are great introductions for kids in elementary and middle school to three of great ancient civilizations. The stories are factual (they’re not imitating the grocery store tabloids), but they are spiced up with punchy headlines. This is not just a gimmick. It helps communicate to students that the history book facts were news when they happened – and often unexpected or surprising or sometimes downright shocking!

The Egyptian News
by Scott Steedman

Sample headlines:

Exclusive: Boy King Murdered?
Sudden Death of Tutankhamen Stuns Nation

Crazy King Causes Chaos
Egypt’s priests rejoiced at the death of Amenhotep IV in 1336 B.C. During his 16 years as pharaoh, he had made their lives miserable – and had turned our religion upside down!

There are also feature stories on such topics as “The Longest Boat in Our Country,” an exclusive interview with the royal mummy maker and (Egyptian) advice on marriage, pets, and house-hunting.

32 pages, paperback, $7.99 from Greenleaf Press

The Greek News
by Anton Powell & Philip Steele

Sample headlines:

Greece in Peril!
Xerxes leads Persian Invasion

Sparta Attacks!
Civil War Rages On. . .

Alexander Wins!

The news stories are following by feature pages on trade, sports, theater, housing, health, food, fashion, etc.

32 pages, paperback, $7.99 from Greenleaf Press

The Roman News
by Andrew Langley & Philip De Souza

Sample headlines:

Hannibal Invades!

Caesar Stabbed!
Rome in Turmoil after Brutal Murder!

City Destroyed! (on the destruction on Pompeii)

Colosseum Opens

There’s a very interesting 2-page spread exploring the topic of “Empire or Republic?” The Advertisements, fashion pages, food pages, and women’s pages give a wealth of interesting details.

32 pages, paperback, $7.99 from Greenleaf Press

In addition to being light-hearted and entertaining, there are refreshing details common to all three books. They all use BC/AD dating and explain that BC = before the birth of Christ and AD is after the birth of Christ. They’re also modest about the Egyptian dates with a note that states “As the events in this book took place so long ago, historians cannot be sure of the exact dates. You may find that the dates we have given vary a little from those found in other sources.”

Each of these can be ordered directly from Greenleaf Press by clicking on the book cover or on the underlined links.

– Rob Shearer, Publisher

Then and Now Bible Maps – Deluxe

Rose Publishing continues to provide excellent resources for church & home. Thousands of homeschool families have found their publications to be extremely helpful for their study of the Bible and church history.

Ten years ago they published a wonderful set of maps called Then and Now Bible Maps. That resource continues to be in print, but they’ve now released a Deluxe version of the Atlas with double the number of pages, and a CD-ROM with each of the maps in .jpg and .pdf format. There on five maps on the period from Beginnings to the Exodus; four maps on the Conquest & the Judges; five maps on the Divided Kingdom; five maps on the Life of Jesus; and seven maps on Paul’s Journeys and the Spread of Christianity.

Along with each map in this spiral bound reference book is a clear overlay with modern-day boundaries and place names. It is extremely helpful for students (and teachers) to see the modern nations and cities that correspond with biblical places.

Deluxe Then and Now Bible Maps is a hardback (with spiral binding inside), 40 pages, and sells for $29.99 direct from Greenleaf Press.

Rose Pamphlets

Rose is also the publisher of an excellent series of 12-panel reference pamphlets on a wide variety of biblical reference and church history topics. I particularly like their compact timelines and their apologetics topics like Denominations, Translations, Worldviews, and Eastern Religions. Greenleaf stocks all of these pamphlets. They’re well organized, well-researched, balanced, and designed to fit neatly inside a Bible as a reference tool. They’re very affordable, at $3.99 each.

Pippo the Fool – Brunelleschi’s Dome for Children

Just published!

Pippo is the nickname of Filippo Brunelleschi. He was a goldsmith in Florence with a knack for design. When a contest is announced to design a dome for the cathedral, Pippo decides he will compete. His rivals (older, wealthier, more accomplished) scorn him and laugh at his ideas. But Pippo is the only contestant who has worked out all the practical details of how to build a dome that will be 300 feet tall!

Fern and Estrada have created a delightful story for children about this important event from the history of the Renaissance in Florence. Brunelleschi won the competition and spent sixteen years supervising the construction of the dome. In order to make it work, he had to invent new kinds of bricks, new patterns for fitting them together and quick-drying mortar to hold them in place.

When the Dome was finished, Pippo the Fool is recognized as Pippo the Genius

The text in this delightful story is written for children 8 through 12, but the story will hold the attention of even older students.

Pippo the Fool is a hardback, 48 pages and sells for $15.95 directly from Greenleaf Press.

Bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln’s birth

Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809, just a few weeks before Thomas Jefferson finished his second term as President. (Before the Constitution was amended in 1933, newly elected presidents were not sworn in until March 4).

2009 then is the 200th anniversary of his birth. As you might suspect this has led to the publishing of a number of new children’s books on Lincoln. Here are seven books, published in 2008, that I think are the cream of the crop, along with a number of Lincoln resources published in prior years.

Mr. Lincoln’s Boys

Mr. Lincoln’s Boys: Being the MOSTLY True Adventures of Abraham Lincoln’s Trouble-Making Sons, TAD and Willie
by Staton Rabin, illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline 

There are several reasons why this is an outstanding children’s book on Lincoln. The illustrations are fascinating in their detailed depiction of the White House in the 1860s. Ibatoulline continues to be one of the finest of current illustrators. The text gives us the boys’ view of life in the White House, with about half the pages devoted to recounting the boys’ appeal to the president for a pardon for their toy soldier “Jack” whom they had caught sleeping while on guard duty. The incident is well-documented in several Lincoln biographies and provides insight into Lincoln’s character. Text is 2nd-3rd grade level, but younger students will much enjoy hearing the story read.

Mr. Lincoln’s Boys is a hardback, 40 pages, and sells for $16.99

Abe’s Honest Words

Abe’s Honest Words: The Life of Abraham Lincoln
by Doreen Rappaport, illustrated by Kadir Nelson 

Rappaport retells the story of Lincoln’s life from boyhood to presidency in short, evocative sentences – readable by early to mid-elementary school students, but carrying a great deal of depth. An example:

He learned sorrow at age nine
when his mama died.
But he found great joy
with a loving stepmother,
who encouraged him to read and learn.

Each 2-page spread has a beautiful illustration, some short, poetic text by Rappaport, and a quote by Lincoln himself. After 10 pages devoted to the young Lincoln, the text and pictures show his early political career in Illinois, and then in 18 pages cover his presidency. There is a striking painting of the front steps on the capitol on inauguration day in March of 1865, with a ray of sunlight breaking through winter clouds

Text is 2nd-5th grade in reading level.

Abe’s Honest Words is a hardback, 48 pages, and sells for $16.99

Lincoln in His Own Words

Lincoln In His Own Words
edited by Milton Meltzer, illustrated by Stephen Alcorn 

For older students who want to study Lincoln, I highly recommend this volume. Primary source material is the only way to truly understand any historical figure. Meltzer has not just edited/selected from Lincoln’s writing. He includes a narrative and introduction to each piece that sets it in context and provides invaluable help to the reader in understanding Lincoln’s views and the historical context that frame his thoughts.

Text is middle school to high school and adult.

This is a paperback release of the hardback from 1993

Lincoln in His Own Words is a paperback, 226 pages, and sells for $9.99

Lincoln through the Lens

Lincoln through the Lens: How Photography Revealed and Shaped an Extraordinary Life
by Martin W. Sandler 

Photography was invented during Lincoln’s lifetime. While he was president, he became the most photographed person on the planet – most of them by Matthew Brady and his assistants. Sandler has selected the most historically significant, including not a few which were not discovered in the archives until the 1950s and later. There is an amazing shot of the 2nd inauguration in which Booth and five of his conspirators have been identified.

Text is junior high and up

Lincoln through the Lens is a hardback, 97 pages and sells for $19.99

The Lincolns:
A Scrapbook Look at Abraham and Mary

The Lincolns: A Scrapbook Look at Abraham and Mary
by Candace Fleming 

This is a fabulous wealth of primary sources. Not just photographs of Lincoln, but newspaper accounts, engravings, cartoons, letters, book covers, and short narrative descriptions of each one. Includes the latest Lincoln discoveries (yes, they’re still finding things!) including letters between Mary and her son Robert which were only discovered in 2006. Mary’s life from 1865 to her death in 1882 is a tragic tale. Their second son, Eddie had died, age four in 1850. Willie had died while they were in the White House. Tad died in 1871 at the age of 18. Of their four sons, only Robert survived. And he and Mary became estranged after his marriage in 1869.

 

The focus of the scrapbook is a personal history of the Lincolns, though it necessarily includes references to the political and military events of the day. The author spent five years researching, collecting items, and writing the book. Not a continuous narrative, but as the title declares, a scrapbook of fascinating, original items.

The Lincolns: A Scrapbook is a hardback, 181 pages and sells for $24.99

Abraham Lincoln Comes Home

Abraham Lincoln Comes Home
by Robert Burleigh, paintings by Wendell Minor 

This children’s book tells the story of the Lincoln funeral train, from the point of view of a young boy and his father who ride out in the middle of the night to join thousands of others as they gathered by the tracks to pay their final respects. There are two pages of historical notes about the funeral train, which traveled 1600 miles over 13 days and made stops in 12 cities. In New York, over a million people turned out to watch the funeral procession which included one hundred thousand Union soldiers.

The text is 1st-3rd grade in reading level.

Abraham Lincoln Comes Home is a hardback, 40 pages, and sells for $16.95

Lincoln Shot: A President’s Life Remembered

Lincoln Shot: A President’s Life Remembered
chief writer: Barry Denenberg, artist: Christopher Bing 

An oversized book designed as a special newspaper edition that might have been written on the day of his assassination, and in the days immediately following. Begins with the events of the assassination and then covers Lincoln’s life with sections on Boyhood, Youth, Politician, Candidate, and then 20 pages devoted to the Civil War Years. The layout and style give the information an immediacy that will appeal to many young readers. Oversized format, 18″ high by 12″ wide helps convey the feel of an illustrated 1860s newspaper.

Reading level is middle school and up.

Lincoln Shot is a hardback, 40 pages, and sells for $24.95

 

Not all the good books on Lincoln are new, of course. There are three classics that I would highly recommend.

Abraham Lincoln
by the d’Aulaires

Abraham Lincoln
by Ingri & Edgar Parin d’Aulaire 

When this book was created in 1939, America was at a crossroads. Hitler’s armies had gobbled up Czechoslovakia and conquered Poland in Septermber. As European immigrants the d’Aulaires felt keenly the importance of standing against injustice, and saw in Lincoln the archetypal American hero. It was this spirit they hoped to exemplify in their biography of young Abe as he grew into manhood against the backdrop of the wilderness of Kentucky, the deep woods of Indiana, and the prairies of Illinois. Camping for weeks in Lincoln country, the d’Aulaires imbibed the spirit of the man Lincoln as well as his humor and good will. From his days as a clerk, teaching himself law reading Blackstone, practicing law in Springfield, running unsuccessfully for office, debating Stephen Douglas over the issue of slavery, and ultimately becoming President of the United States, the d’Aulaires have written and beautifully illustrated the life of one of America’s most remarkable citizens. This book was awarded the Caldecott Medal in 1940.

The text is middle school and up.

Abraham Lincoln is a paperback, 60 pages and sells for $13.95

Lincoln: A Photobiography

Lincoln: A Photobiography
by Russell Freedman 

In 1988, Freedman won the Newbery medal for this remarkable book. It tells the story of Abraham Lincoln with photographs and prints, providing a vivid look at the life and times of one of the nation’s great leaders. 
The progression of photographs which mark the change in Lincoln’s physical appearance from the beginning of his presidency to the end of the Civil War four years later is striking. Even the casual reader is instantly aware of the cost that Lincoln paid, communicated more profoundly than could be done with thousands of words on the topic.

Lincoln: A Photobiography is a paperback, 160 pages, and sells for $9.95

Abraham Lincoln’s World

Abraham Lincoln’s World
by Genevieve Foster 

An interesting look at the man and the world in which he lived. Britain’s enormous growth and emergence as a democracy, Germany’s unification under Bismarck, the freeing of the Russian serfs, the opening of Japan to foreign trade, and many other events are outlined. Foster’s engaging text is interlaced with pictures, maps, and time lines. She succeeds in painting a plethora of figures as real people, while putting their actions in a broad world-wide context.

Reading level is middle school and up.

Originally published in 1944

Abraham Lincoln’s World is a paperback, 360 pages, and sells for $17.95

 

There are also these excellent resources on Lincoln, published in previous years:

Lincoln: The Presidential Archives

Lincoln: The Presidential Archives
by Chuck Wills 

Published in September of 2007. Chuck Wills is an accomplished author and he does an excellent job outlining Lincoln’s life and political career in nine chapters. The text is interspersed with hundreds of photographs and shots of newspaper headlines and front pages.

What really sets this book apart is the inclusion of facsimile reproductions of original documents. About a dozen are included, each on a tinted separate heavy-stock sheet slipped into a translucent pocket at the appropriate place in the books narrative.

With the chapter discussing Lincoln’s boyhood and education, there is a reproduction of a page from his “sum book.” In the chapter on his marriage and young family, there is a reproduction of his marriage license to Mary Todd. In each case, holding an original document (even if it is only a well-crafted facsimile) makes the historical account richer, nearer, more tangible and provokes a more visceral, emotional response. It makes Lincoln much more real, much less abstract.

The text is written on an adult level (though certainly not too advanced for high school students), and many students will need some help in absorbing and understanding the historical documents, but I can’t think of a better way to introduce students to the raw materials of history and historical research. For anyone with a historical sense of who Lincoln was (and the text and photographs will give it to you), seeing a flyer for a play at Ford’s Theater on April 14, 1865 and then seeing the “wanted” poster issued in the manhunt for Lincoln’s assassins produces a profound effect.

For anyone with an interest in Lincoln, I highly recommend this book – especially if your students have an interest in understanding how historians conduct their research.

Note: 2009 will be the bicentennial of Lincoln’s birth. I know it’s a cliché to study Lincoln around President’s Day, but 2009 will be a special year.

Here’s a list of the historical, facsimile documents included in the book:

  • a leaf from Lincoln’s string-bound childhood sum book
  • Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln’s marriage license, 1842
  • Patent application submitted by Lincoln in 1849
  • 1860 campaign banner for the Republican ticket
  • First letter carried over the plains by the Pony Express with the news “Lincoln elected,” November 8, 1860
  • Letter from Mary Todd to Abraham sent during her tour of New England in the fall of 1862
  • Lincoln’s original handwritten copy of the Emancipation Proclamation issued on January 1, 1863
  • Telegram from New York City to Lincoln with news of the Draft Riot, July 13, 1863
  • Telegram from Sherman to Lincoln presenting him with Savannah as a “Christmas gift,” December 25, 1864
  • Telegram from Lincoln to Grant encouraging him, February 1, 1865
  • Poster advertising “Our American Cousin” to be performed at Ford’s Theater April 14, 1865
  • Broadside offering rewards for the capture of Lincoln’s assassins

Lincoln: The Presidential Archives is a hardback, 159 pages and sells for $40.00

If You Grew Up with Abraham Lincoln

If You Grew Up With Abraham Lincoln
by Ann McGovern 

“If you grew up with Abraham Lincoln, what kind of house would you live in? How would you travel? What would you do for fun?” These – and 25 other questions children might ask about life in Lincoln’s time – are answered in this information-packed book for young readers. The author shows boys and girls what it would be like to live in the same places that Lincoln lived – as a boy in Kentucky and Indiana, as a young man in the prairie town of New Salem, Illinois, and later in the city of Springfield, Illinois. A picture appendix shows what great changes occurred from the time Lincoln was a boy to the time he was President in Washington D.C.

If You Grew Up with Abraham Lincoln is a paperback, 32 pages and sells for $5.99

Young Abe Lincoln

Young Abe Lincoln: The Frontier Days, 1809-1837
by Cheryl Harness 

Details about the early life of Abraham Lincoln unfold from eye-catching artwork and lively text in this biography in which readers discover a self-taught man of character and compassion growing up on the frontier in the early 1800s. Full-color illustrations & maps.

Young Abe Lincoln is a paperback, 32 pages, and sells for $7.95

Abe Lincoln Goes to Washington

Abe Lincoln Goes to Washington, 1837-1865
by Cheryl Harness 

This sequel to “Abe Lincoln: The Frontier Days, 1809-1837” follows Lincoln’s life from the age of 28, when he arrives in Springfield, Illinois, ready to take up his post in the state legislature, to his assassination in 1865. Includes six maps researched by the National Geographic Society. Full-color illustrations.

Abe Lincoln Goes to Washington is a paperback, 32 pages, and sells for $7.95

Abraham Lincoln for Kids

Abraham Lincoln for Kids: His Life and Times with 21 Activities
by Janis Herbert 

Providing a fresh perspective on one of the most beloved presidents of all time, this illuminating activity book tells the rich story of Abraham Lincoln’s life and details the events of his era. Highlighting Lincoln’s warm, generous spirit and impressive intellect, the guide teaches children about his fascinating life story, his struggles at the onset of the Civil War, and his relevance in today’s world. Activities include delivering a speech, holding a debate, drawing political cartoons, and making a stovepipe hat or miniature Mississippi River flatboat. Lively sidebars, abundant photographs and illustrations, and fun projects help to kick the dust off old Honest Abe. Selections from some of Lincoln’s most famous speeches and documents, as well as a resource section of websites to explore and sites to visit, are also included, making this a comprehensive Lincoln biography for young readers.

Abraham Lincoln for Kids is a paperback, 160 pages and sells for $14.95

Abe Lincoln: Log Cabin to White House (Landmark)

Abe Lincoln: Log Cabin to White House (Landmark Book)
by Sterling North 

Yes, that’s the same Sterling North who wrote the classic children’s book, Rascal! He was commissioned by Random House to write biographies of George Washington and Abe Lincoln for the Landmark Books in the 1950s. This is an excellent first biography of Lincoln for upper elementary/jr high

The Landmark Abe Lincoln is a paperback, 160 pages, and sells for $5.99

Abraham Lincoln:
Friend of the People

Abraham Lincoln: Friend of the People
by Clara Ingram Judson 

This Newbery Honor Book from 1940 — from a three-time Newbery Honor author — paints an indelible portrait of the prairie president. Clara Ingram Judson presents Lincoln in all his gauntness, gawkiness, and greatness: a backwoods boy who became President and saved the Union. Judson’s careful reading is enlivened by her visits to his home and vivid descriptions of the Lincoln family’s pioneer life. She reveals the unforgettable story from his boyhood and days as a shopkeeper and lawyer, to Lincoln’s first elected offices and his election as president, the Civil War, and assassination. 
Originally published by: Wilcox and Follett 1950

Abraham Lincoln: Friend of the People is a paperback, 195 pages, and sells for $6.95

Any of the books reviewed here can be ordered from Greenleaf Press just by clicking on the image of the book cover or the linked title.

 

New books in the mail, and on the reading stack

The Look-It-Up Book of Presidents

One of the first “Presidents” books to be updated with a bio of Obama. No glaring red flags in the Bush & Obama write-ups. the author appears to have tried to be even-handed. Less happy with the Harding & Wilson sections. Will have to read through carefully before making a final judgement.

 

The Great Game: The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia

Originally published in 1990 in Great Britain. The Great Game was the struggle between Victorian Britain and Tsarist Russia for influence and position in Central Asia. Britain feared that the Russians would come south through Afghanistan and threaten India – which the Russias openly desired to do. I’ve run across a number of references to the book and the metaphor. Time to fill in a little corner of knowledge.

 

The Baader-Meinhof Complex

Originally published in 1985 in the Germany, translated in 1987. Re-published in 2008 in the UK – not yet available in the US, but there is a seller you can click through to from Amazon. There’s a new movie out in Germany which tells the tale, based on this book written by a reporter who knew many of them but who rejected their irrational, romantic embrace of violence. Can’t wait to dig in.

H.A. Rey’s Find the Constellations – return of a classic

H.A. Rey (and his wife, Margaret Rey) are best known as the authors of the Curious George series. Less well known is their personal history, emigrating from Hamburg, Germany during the 1930’s, first to Rio de Janeiro, and then to Paris, followed by a harrowing escape across France by bicycle in 1940 when the Germans invaded, making their way eventually to the United States. There’s a great book out that recounts that story – The Journey That Saved Curious George.

Find the Constellations is a classic book, that many of us will remember from our childhood – without ever having necessarily connected it the Curious George books. H.A. Rey originally published this book in 1954 – and it was hailed at the time as a classic introduction to the night sky, with some of the clearest star charts and constellation outlines ever produced.

This is a 72 page, 9in. x 10in. book, and goes far beyond just teaching the outlines of the constellations. Rey provides an introduction to the history of the constellations, the concept of star magnitude or brightness, the individual names of some of the brightest and most famous stars, and how to find and identify the planets. He also discusses the precession of the stars across the night sky day by day. The difference from one day to the next in a star reaching the same spot in the sky is 4 minutes. In one week it is 28 minutes. In a month, about 2 hours. In 12 months, 24 hours, and the stars are back to the positions at the same time as one year ago. This is a very practical way of introducing the connections between the motions of the earth and the stars and the seasons. And that is but one example of the topics artfully introduced.

Rey was a true renaissance man. German by birth, he studied philosophy, natural sciences, and languages at the universities of Munich and Hamburg. He spoke four languages fluently and read half a dozen more.

It’s great to see a classic children’s book like this revived and re-issued by the publisher – this edition brought out by Houghton Mifflin just last month.

Find the Constellations is 72 pages, and available in hardback ($20) or paperback ($9.99) and can be ordered directly from Greenleaf Press by clicking on any of the links in this review.

10% discount offer with this email – use the coupon code REY at check out and 10% will be automatically deducted from your order.
Discount coupon can only be used once per customer and applies only to the title Find the Constellations (either hardback or paperback).

– Rob Shearer, Publisher
Greenleaf Press

The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Civil War

Just published – The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Civil War! This is a worthy addition to the Politically Incorrect Guides. I’ve previously reviewed the Politically Incorrect Guide to Western Civilization, and the Politically Incorrect Guide to English and American Literature.

First, a few caveats. Neither the book (nor this post) is an apology for or a defense of slavery. I believe slavery to have been a great moral evil – and I wish it had been ended in this country earlier and with less bloodshed. But there is much more to the Civil War than simply the question of whether slavery was evil and should be abolished.

Crocker deals directly with the topic of slavery early in the book in a 12-page essay in answer to the question, “Was the war really all about slavery?”

The first sentence of his answer is, “In the sense that the South was defined by slavery, yes.” He then proceeds to qualify that answer and show that the issue is far more complex than the politically correct answer.

As an example, he quotes a famous letter from Abraham Lincoln to Horace Greely in August 1862, in which he stated: “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others also I would also do that.”

As Mr. Crocker observes, “. . . the stated aim of the Lincoln administration in 1861 was not the abolition of slavery; it was the forcible reunification of the Union.”

Both Jefferson Davis (President of the Confederate States) and Robert E. Lee believed that the abolition of slavery was something that would happen peaceably in due course. Lee’s opinion was that “emancipation will sooner result from the mild and melting influence of Christianity than from the storms and contests of fiery controversy.”

Crocker’s summarizes the conflict as a clash of cultures:

“The South considered the North an unprincipled money-grubbing, self-righteously intolerant leviathan, and thought of itself as a liberty-loving agricultural Sparta of gracious gentlemen, classical culture, and feudal order.

The North considered the South a backward land of hot-tempered planter-aristocrats who kept a booted heel and a master’s whip on the backs of slaves, tainted the Union with its “peculiar institution,” and dragged it into wars against Mexico only to expand its hateful “slave power.” The North, in its own view, was enlightened, practical and business-like, and consequently wealthy, forward-looking, and the obvious moral superior to a region that kept imported Africans in bondage.”

As Crocker shows, each side tended to caricature the other – which only underscores that the conflict (although it involved slavery as a central issue) was about much more than slavery. Crocker argues, convincingly, that the war was fought, not to free the slaves (though in the end, it resulted in their freedom), but to forcibly prevent the Southern states from peaceably seceding.

The majority of the book is not about why the war was fought, but devoted to retelling the course of the war from the Southern perspective. There are two chapters which tell The History of the War in Sixteen Battles You Should Know. These are well worth the read.

This is followed by nine chapters which are admirable biographies of the leading generals on both sides. Southern generals sketched are Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet, Nathan Bedford Forrest, Stonewall Jackson, and A.P. Hill. But there are also chapter length biographies of the Union generals George H. Thomas (introduced with the wry comment that “some of the best Union generals were southerners”), William Tecumseh Sherman, Ulysses S. Grant, and George McClellan.

Part IV of the book is a fascinating study of cavalry officers Wade Hampton, Philip Sheridan, J.E.B. Stuart and George Armstrong Custer.

Part V, titled Beating Retreat is an extended essay on the topic, What If the South Had Won? Crocker composes a remarkable speech that Lincoln might have given, but tragically didn’t, that begins:

We part as friends. We hope to reunite as friends. There will be no coercion of the Southern states by the people of the North. No state shall be kept in the Union against its will . . . but we ask the Southern states, to which we are bound by mystic chords of memory and affection, that they reconsider their action., If not now, then later, when the heat of anger has subsided, when they have seen the actions of this administration work only for the good of the whole and not for the partisan designs of a few; when this administration shows by word and deed that it is happy to live within the confines of the Constitution, that we will admit of no interference in the stabled institutions of the several states. I trust that by our demeanor, by our character, by our actions, by our prosperity and our progress we will prove to our separated brethren that we should again be more than neighbors, we should be more than friends, we should in fact be united states, for a house united is far stronger, will be far more prosperous, and will be far happier than a house divided, a house rent asunder by rancor, a house that undermines its very foundations by separation.
To the people of Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, and Arkansas, I have a special message. I tell you that this government will raise no arms against the states of the Southern Confederacy. We will wage no war of subjugation against these states. And I confirm, yet again, that I have neither the right, nor the power, nor the desire to abolish slavery within these states or any other where it is lawfully established. What I do desire, as do all Northern states, is that we be once again a nation united in peace, amity, and common government. Let us through prayer and good graces work to achieve that end. I ask that all good men of the United States, and those now separated from us, work peaceably to achieve the reconciliation that is our destiny and our hope. Four score years ago we created a new nation, united in principle. I pray that sharing the same God, the same continent, and the same destiny, we might unite again in common principle and common government.”

If Lincoln had not gone to war to keep the Southern states from seceding, would they have one day returned and reunited with the Union peaceably? We will never know. We do know what waging war to prevent secession cost – and it was far more than Lincoln, or anyone else, expected.

Included as an Afterword to this volume is an essay by Jefferson Davis which he composed for his own history of the Confederacy. It is worth reading if one wants to understand what motivated the Southern states to secede and to fight for their independence.

The Politically Incorrect Guides are intended for college students as a balance and useful corrective to the usual bill of fare in politically correct textbooks, but they could be profitably read by high school students who are studying this important period of history. This Guide will also serve as a thought-provoking read for parents and all those interested in better understanding what is still one of the central facts of the history of the United States, the Civil War.

The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Civil War is a paperback, 370 pages. Like all of the Politically Incorrect Guides, it sells for $19.95 and may be ordered directly from Greenleaf Press by clicking on the links in this message.

– Rob Shearer
Publisher, Greenleaf Press
Director, Schaeffer Study Center

There are a number of other Politically Incorrect Guides. They are well-written, well-researched, and well documented. Each serves as a useful corrective to the overwhelming cultural bias that our current textbooks suffer from. We’ve decided at Greenleaf to carry them all. Here are all 15 of the titles:

Or you can order the Complete Politically Correct Library – all 15 titles – for $250 – a 16% discount (that’s like getting two books free!)

We the People

We the People
The Story of Our Constitution

by Lynn Cheney, paintings by Greg Harlin

It is hard for us not to idealize the founding fathers. It is hard for us to put ourselves in their frame of mind. We know that the Republic endured. We know that the peaceful transfer of executive power has been faithfully observed for 220 years across the administrations of 43 presidents. The authors of the constitution were, in fact, embarking on a great experiment in government. Since the overthrow of the Roman Republic in 44 BC, no nation had been able to govern itself without kings, nobles, or warlords. By 1787, six years after Yorktown, and four years after the peace treaty signed with Great Britain, the confederation of former English colonies in North America was failing.

Here is the remarkable introduction by Lynne Cheney:

“When 1787 began, our young country was in turmoil. The central government was unable to pay off debts, there was armed insurrection in Massachusetts, and foreign governments were taking advantage of our weakness. The question of the hour, James Madison wrote, was ‘whether the American experiment was to be a blessing to the world or to blast forever the hopes which the republican cause had inspired.’

The framers of the Constitution made it a blessing, creating a new and stronger American union and flying in the face of prevailing wisdom as they did so. In the eighteenth century, representative government in a nation of vast scale was thought impossible, a recipe for chaos and confusion; but an extended republic based on popular sovereignty was exactly what the Constitution created in Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 envisaged. The government based upon it has now endured more than 220 years.

The story of our founding document is an important one for our children to know. It is a tale of persistence, as delegates kept on despite obstacles that at times made their task seem impossible. It is a tale of creativity, with the delegates providing a framework for a government entirely new. It is also a story that makes clear there was nothing inevitable about the Constitution that emerged from the Philadelphia convention. History might have gone otherwise but for the framers’ genius, and we should be grateful for James Madison, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and the others who gathered in Philadelphia. We should be grateful as well for men and women such as Frederick Douglass, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Martin Luther King Jr., who in later centuries took up the work of the founders, making the union formed in 1787 the more perfect one we know today.”

Cheney tells the story in a simple, straight-forward style. The proposal to separate the powers of government into three branches, the fierce debate and compromise over equal votes for each state or proportional representation in the legislative assembly; the call for a chaplain and prayer made by Franklin; and the debate over who would ratify the Constitution. The text has a quotation from a founder on almost every page that provides further insight into the issues. The paintings focus on the characters of the delegates. Gestures, glances, frowns, and extravagant gestures help the reader to understand the fierceness of the debates. There is a marvelous painting on one page of Washington taking the day off to go fishing and another that shows Franklin entertaining visitors in his garden.

The text overall is middle to upper elementary. The large illustrations will capture the attention of younger children if the text is read to them.

We the People by Lynne Cheney is a hardback, 40 pages, full color, $17.99 directly from Greenleaf Press.

– Rob Shearer
Publisher, Greenleaf Press
Director, Schaeffer Study Center

When Washington Crossed the Delaware

Lynne Cheney is a very gifted writer. She is, of course, the “2nd Lady” (wife of Vice-President Dick Cheney). But she is also a distinguished scholar with impressive credentials, including a Ph.D. in British Literature. She served as the Chairwoman of the National Endowment for the Humanities from 1986 to 1993 and is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. Over the past six years she has published a series of very good children’s books on topics in American history.

I think the two best are Washington (published in 2004), and We the People, which just came out this month.

When Washington Crossed the Delaware is subtitled “A Wintertime Story for Young Patriots.” With a clear, direct narrative, Ms. Cheney sets the scene of the beleaguered American army which had been driven from New York and forced to retreat through New Jersey into Pennsylvania. She talks about how desperately the Americans needed a victory – in order to give everyone some hope that they could eventually defeat the British. She mentions Tom Paine, who marched with the American army as they retreated through New Jersey and includes the famous line he composed on the march, “These are the times that try men’s souls. . .”

The paintings that accompany Ms. Cheney’s text are wonderful. The illustrator was able to visit the site of the crossing, consult with local historians and witness a winter re-enactment of the crossing. The attention to detail shows. You can feel the cold. Your eye is involuntarily drawn to the figure of Washington, warming himself by a fire on the New Jersey shore of the river.

After the army is assembled, you can see Washington’s impatience and determination as they set out towards the Hessians soldiers who have occupied Trenton. He had hoped to attack before sunup, but now would be attacking shortly after dawn. The narrative mentions that both 19-year-old Captain Alexander Hamilton, and 18-year-old Lieutenant James Monroe took part in the crossing and the attack on Trenton. Monroe was badly wounded leading a charge against the Hessians, when they managed to get two of their cannon into operation. Hamilton went on to be a signer of the US Constitution and served as Secretary of the Treasury under President Washington. Monroe would be elected our fifth President in 1808.

Following the surrender of the Hessians at Trenton, Washington continued his offensive by launching an attack on the British regulars a few miles northeast of Trenton at Princeton. In that battle, Washington personally rallied his troops and led them to within thirty yards of the British lines. It is miraculous that he survived the volleys of musket fire, but when the British line broke, he joined in the pursuit.

The twin victories at Trenton and Princeton lifted the spirits of the Continental Army and patriots throughout the colonies. For the first time, the American army had defeated British regulars (and German mercenaries) on the field of battle. There would be many more battles and several years of trials, but the character and commitment of General Washington were brilliantly displayed.

Perhaps the best part of this book is that although it is pitched towards elementary students, the story will appeal just as much to older students. First graders will be captivated by the full-page color illustrations and enjoy having the text read to them. Third/Fourth graders will probably be able to read it for themselves. Each two-page spread includes a quotation from an eyewitness/participant in the battle.

When Washington Crossed the Delaware
is a hardback, 40 pages, and is available for $16.95, directly from Greenleaf Press.

– Rob Shearer, Publisher
Greenleaf Press

PS: You have to love the picture of Lynn Cheney with a group of students on the back cover!

PPS: I’ll have a complete review of We the People in another newsletter.

Books on my bedside table (and in my book bag)

 



The Drillmaster of Valley Forge:
The Baron De Steuben and the Making of the American Army

 

I’m about halfway through. VERY good stuff.

We Are Soldiers Still

By Harold G. Moore, Joseph L. Galloway

 

If you read We Were Soldiers Once, And Young, then this is a must read. Follow-up to the account of one of the bloodiest battles of the Viet Nam war – 1st Cav almost over-run and wiped out by N. Vietnamese regulars. Marred by Gen. Moore’s attack in the final chapter on President Bush, but still a great read.

The Franco-Prussian War 1870-1871

 

It’s amazing how little we know about what happened in Europe in the 1800s. Completing my own education.

We the People
The Story of the Constitution

By Lynne Cheney

 

Just came in today. Looks very good. I’ll be reviewing it for Greenleaf later.

Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out

Created by 108 Renowned Authors and Illustrators

 

Also came in today. Also looks very good

The Lodger Shakespeare:
His Life on Silver Street

By Charles Nicholl

 

Fascinating – if you’re interested in Shakespeare. If you’re not, this will seem much ado about very little

Mysteries of the Middle Ages:
And the Beginning of the Modern World

By Thomas Cahill

 

A great disappointment – How the Irish Saved Civilization is brilliant. This seems contrived and self-indulgent.

The Almost True Story of Ryan Fisher: A Novel

By Rob Stennett

 

Brilliant. Outrageously funny. Provocative. What if a realtor joined a church in order to market himself to Christians – knowing that he, himself, is NOT a Christian – and wound up planting his own mega-church?

The Professor and the Madman:
A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary

By Simon Winchester

 

The OED story is fascinating, in and of itself. Mix in a mysterious retired American military officer who has contributed 1,000’s of quotations and you have a most intriguing story.

Armageddon: The Battle for Germany, 1944-1945

By Max Hastings

 

We know the story of D-Day, so we think we know the story of how Germany was defeated. The year-long battle was harrowing, terrifying, and apocalyptic in the East. Frightening stories from soldiers & civilians describing what happened at ground level. Well-written

Triple Cross:
How bin Laden’s Master Spy Penetrated the CIA, the Green Berets, and the FBI–and Why Patrick Fitzgerald Failed to Stop Him

By Peter Lance

 

The title explains it all. Truly frightening and maddening story about how security in the US was compromised. Shows something of the caliber and planning of Al Qaeda. Well-documented and researched.

Islam At The Gates:
How Christendom Defeated the Ottoman Turks

By Diane Moczar

 

This has happened before.

Economics in One Lesson:
The Shortest and Surest Way to Understand Basic Economics

By Henry Hazlitt

 

Consider the consequences of policy for everyone – and long-term as well short-term.

With numerous examples of what goes wrong when you don’t!

Homeschool: An American History

By Milton Gaither

 

From colonial to modern times, with an emphasis on the modern movement – by a Professor of Education who is NOT a homeschooler, but not wholly unsympathetic to the movement. Pretty fair treatment of both secular and religious groups.

Why We’re Not Emergent:
By Two Guys Who Should Be

By Kevin DeYoung and Ted Kluck

 

Cause the Emergent guys are squishy on the Bible, the creeds, and anything that might put them in that embarrassing “Christian” box.

I Was Vermeer:
The Rise and Fall of the Twentieth Century’s Greatest Forger

By Frank Wynne

 

Turns out he fooled lots of museums and collectors. And they don’t want to know or find out that their prize possession is a forgery. Scary.

What Hath God Wrought:
The Transformation of America, 1815-1848 (Oxford History of the United States)

By Daniel Walker Howe

 

Serious history. VERY well-written, thorough and comprehensive. If you want to understand the transition from the founders to the Civil War era, there is no better book.

Climate Change
(DK Eyewitness Books)

By John Woodward

 

Opposition research.

And that’s what I did on my summer vacation

– Rob Shearer (aka RedHatRob)
Publisher, Greenleaf Press
Director, Schaeffer Study Center