Synopses & Reviews
This unforgettable portrait of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War effortlessly mixes humor with Shakespearean-like tragedy to create an achingly human portrait of the sixteenth president. Charyn conducts an orchestra of historical figures and fictional extras centered around a profoundly moral but troubled commander in chief whose relationship with his Ophelia-like wife and his sons--Robert, Willie, and Tad--is explored with penetrating psychological insight and the utmost compassion. Seized by melancholy and imbued with an unfaltering sense of human worth, Charyn's President Lincoln comes to vibrant, three-dimensional life in a haunting portrait we have rarely seen in historical fiction.
Review
"Thoughtful, observant and droll." Richard Brookhiser
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"Not only the best novel about President Lincoln since Gore Vidal's in 1984, but it is also twice as good to read." New York Times Book Review
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"Jerome Charyn [is] a fearless writer... Brave and brazen... The book is daringly imagined, written with exuberance, and with a remarkable command of historical detail. It gives us a human Lincoln besieged by vividly drawn enemies and allies... Placing Lincoln within the web ordinary and sometimes petty human relations is no small achievement." Gabor Boritt, author of The Lincoln Enigma and recipient of the National Humanities Medal
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"Audacious as ever, Jerome Charyn now casts his novelist's gimlet eye on sad-souled Abraham Lincoln, a man of many parts, who controls events and people--wife, sons, a splintering nation--even though they often are, as they must be, beyond his compassion or power. Brooding, dreamlike, resonant, and studded with strutting characters, is as wide and deep and morally sure as its wonderful subjects." Andrew Delbanco New York Review of Books
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"If all historians--or any historian--could write with the magnetic charm and authoritative verve of Jerome Charyn, American readers would be fighting over the privilege of learning about their past. They can learn much from this book--an audacious, first-person novel that makes Lincoln the most irresistible figure of a compelling story singed with equal doses of comedy, tragedy, and moral grandeur. Here is something beyond history and approaching art." Brenda Wineapple, author of Ecstatic Nation: Confidence, Crisis, and Compassion: 1848-1877
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"Jerome Charyn is one of the most important writers in American literature." Harold Holzer, chairman, Lincoln Bicentennial Foundation
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"Jerome Charyn is merely one of our finest writers with a polymorphous imagination and crack comic timing. Whatever milieu he chooses to inhabit, his characters sizzle with life, and his sentences are pure vernacular music, his voice unmistakable." Michael Chabon
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"Charyn, like Nabokov, is that most fiendish sort of writer--so seductive as to beg imitation, so singular as to make imitation impossible." Jonathan Lethem
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"One of our most intriguing fiction writers takes on the story of Honest Abe, narrating the tale in Lincoln's voice and offering a revealing portrait of a man as flawed as he was great." Tom Bissell
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"Jerome Charyn, like Daniel Day-Lewis in Steven Spielberg's superb 2012 movie, manages a feat of ventriloquism to be admired... Most of all, Lincoln comes across as human and not some remote giant... With that, Jerome Charyn has given Lincoln a most appropriate present for what would have been his 205th birthday this month: rebirth not as a marble memorial but as a three-dimensional human who overcame much to save his nation." Abbe Wright O, The Oprah Magazine
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"Daring... Memorable... Charyn's richly textured portrait captures the pragmatism, cunning, despair, and moral strength of a man who could have empathy for his bitterest foes, and who 'had never outgrown the forest and a dirt floor.'" Erik Spanberg Christian Science Monitor
Synopsis
Jerome Charyn's "daring" and "memorable" () historical novel renders the inner life of our sixteenth president like never before.
About the Author
Jerome Charyn, a master of lyrical farce and literary ventriloquism, published his first novel in 1964 and is the author of Johnny One-Eye, The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson, I Am Abraham, and dozens of other acclaimed novels and nonfiction works. His stories have appeared in The Atlantic, Paris Review, American Scholar, Epoch, Narrative, Ellery Queen, and other magazines. Two of his memoirs have been named New York Times Book of the Year, and Michael Chabon has called him, "One of the most important writers in American literature." Charyn has also spent time as a professor and an international ranked table tennis player. He lives in New York and Paris.