Synopses & Reviews
'\'The Brief Seventh Edition offers the attractive features of the full-length text\\\'\\\"lively and accessible narrative style, a keen balance of political with social and cultural history, a full-color layout, and exceptional value\\\'\\\"in a more concise format. The Brief Seventh Edition also introduces the carefully integrated new theme of environmental history, adding illuminating perspectives on how Americans have shaped\\\'\\\"and been shaped by\\\'\\\"the natural world.
\''
Synopsis
, now in its twenty-fifth year, has sold more 1.2 million copies over the past seven editions and remains the most affordable history text on the market. The Brief Eighth Edition offers the attractive features of the full-length text--lively and accessible narrative style, a keen balance of political with social and cultural history, a full-color layout, and exceptional value--in a more concise format.
Synopsis
A book students will read.
Synopsis
A book students will read.
Synopsis
'\'Used by over one million students,
America: A Narrative Historyis one of the most successful American history textbooks ever published.\\n
\''
Synopsis
America, now in its twenty-fifth year, has sold more 1.2 million copies over the past seven editions and remains the most affordable history text on the market. The Brief Eighth Edition offers the attractive features of the full-length text'"lively and accessible narrative style, a keen balance of political with social and cultural history, a full-color layout, and exceptional value'"in a more concise format.
About the Author
George Brown Tindall, late of the University of North Carolina, was for many years one of the country's most distinguished professors of American history. He was the author of several books, including South Carolina Negros, 1877-1900; the award-winning The Emergence of the New South, 1913-1945; The Disruption of the Solid South; and, most recently, The Ethnic Southerners.
David E. Shi is president and professor of history at Furman University. Professor Shi was the Frontis W. Johnston Professor of History at Davidson College for more than a decade. His four books focus on American cultural history: Matthew Josephson, Bourgeois Bohemian; The Simple Life: Plain Living and High Thinking in American Culture; In Search of the Simple Life: American Voices, Past and Present; and, most recently, Facing Facts: Realism in American Thought and Culture.