Synopses & Reviews
A screamingly close presidential election. Allegations of fraud. Democrats and republicans, North and South, black and white--all at loggerheads.
With each passing day, the conflict becomes more complex. Hard-eyed political operatives from both parties rush south to fight on every front. "Spin" is everywhere, he truth hardly to be found. From coast to coast, American alternate between anger astonishment, and despair.
One candidate got more popular votes. But he will ultimately be defeated by an astonishing sequence of events--culminating in the tie-breaking vote of a single Justice of the United States Supreme Court.
It's not the year 2000. It's 1876.
It' the election that ended the Civil War--and set the stage fro eighty bitter years of segregation in the South. We live in its shadow still.
Read the full story. You'll never look at American politics the same way again.
Synopsis
The election of 1876 was the closest, most hotly-disputed presidential election in American history, until the election of 2000. Now, in time for the 2004 election, the true (and amazing) story of 1876.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [215]-216) and index.
About the Author
LLOYD ROBINSON is a pseudonym of novelist Robert Silverberg. Under his own name, Silverberg is the author of many works of popular history, including
Empires of the Dust(Chilton, 1963), A
khneton: The Rebel Pharoah (Chilton, 1964),
Ghost Towns of the American West (Ohio University Press, 1968),
If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem:Amercan Jews and the State of Israel (Morrow, 1970),
The Longest Voyage:Circumnavigation in the Age of Discovery, (Bobbs-Merrill, 1972), The Realm of Prester John (Doubleday, 1972), and
The Mound Builders (Ballantine, 1974).