Most helpful customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoy the Journey!, Sep 26 2008
This review is from: Land Of Lincoln: Adventures in Abe's America (Hardcover)
"Land of Lincoln" takes the reader on an entertaining journey in pursuit of the Long Shadow of Long Abe. This book is about the influence of Lincoln's Legacy on individual Americans. With Author Andrew Ferguson, the reader visits Lincoln, people, places and things from a controversial new statue in Richmond, Virginia to a collector in California. Chapter by chapter we visit Sons of Confederate Veterans, the Abraham Lincoln Association, The Lincoln Forum, Lincoln Personators, collectors, business workshop facilitators, Springfield, Indiana and Hodgenville, Kentucky and many other places and people. Individuals such as Collector Louise Taper and Rhode Island Chief Justice Frank Williams, for whom Lincoln seems to be a life role model, leave the reader in awe of their single-minded pursuit of Lincoln. Ferguson does an excellent job in explaining how the treatment of Lincoln has changed over the years, with special emphasis on the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. Ferguson writes in a tongue in cheek manner which adds humor to a work which is both entertaining and educational. As a boy in Illinois who grew up to be an Illinois lawyer, I have a fairly good familiarity with Lincoln, but I learned many things about his life and legacy. I did not know what to expect when I started this book, but enjoyed it from start to finish. I listened to parts dealing with Springfield and Central Illinois while driving through those areas. Ferguson's descriptions of family trips through Lincoln Land sound very familiar. I am glad that even professional historians have problems with less interested children, as do I. As he talked about taking his family through the same sites that he had visited with his parents I felt the satisfaction of having done the same. This book is a treat for anyone who grew up in the shadow of Lincoln, who visits his sites or who lives in the nation which he shaped.
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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Entertaining Meditation on the Meaning of History, May 6 2007
By Ray McConnell - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Land Of Lincoln: Adventures in Abe's America (Hardcover)
The above title could have come from a the mind of a "meatball" at one of those corporate workshops Andrew Ferguson so abhors! I recently read his first book, "Fools Names, Fools Faces," and, whereas the essays in that book could be very cutting, "Land of Lincoln," is just as funny, but much more reflective. Ferguson runs into a wide array of characters on his cross-country Lincoln quest, but he never takes a cheap shot at them for comedic effect. His humor is more nuanced, and, therefore, much more genuine. I especially enjoyed the parts where he described his interaction with his teen-aged children as he attempted to persuade them to spend part of their summer vacation traversing the "Lincoln Heritage Trail." This part, of course, was hilarious, but it pointed to a more serious concern shared by all parents who love history: will our children marinating in this media-saturated entertainment culture ever appreciate history like we do? I have been looking forward to purchasing this book for two years, ever since I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Ferguson at a gathering in Washington DC. He was very cordial to me, and, when he found out I lived in Saginaw, Michigan, he retrieved an article from his office for me about Dr. Mudd of the Lincoln Assassination conspiracy. You see, Dr. Mudd's grandson lived in Saginaw and he spent most of his long life trying to gain a pardon for Dr. Mudd. I must also mention that the quality of Mr. Ferguson's writing is always excellent. In summary, I would recommend this fine book to all who love history from a unique perspective, presented in a well-written, most entertaining fashion!
41 of 47 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Lincoln, and so much more..., May 17 2007
By James Hiller - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Land Of Lincoln: Adventures in Abe's America (Hardcover)
I'm probably one of the biggest Abe Lincoln fans this side of the Mississippi, the west side, that is. Ever since I got bitten by the Abe bug in fifth grade (that horrendous Gettysburg paper diorama still comes to mind), the sixteenth president has haunted me and stayed with me through thick and thin. My interest, more than a mere dabbling, is proven by a range of Lincoln books that grace the downstairs bookshelf, one of the newest being Goodwin's marvelous yarn Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. Suffice it to say, that most of my Lincoln books offer a favorable look at the grisly old man, savior of our nation, and that's what I prefer. When another book pops up on the surface, needless-to-say, I consider buying it to add to the library. So it was with great flourish, and immediacy, that I just found Andrew Ferguson's new Lincoln book Land of Lincoln: Adventures in Abe's America and within minutes, was standing in line purchasing it. Two hours later, and I've read it. And what a joy this book is! Andrew Ferguson's take on Abe is a quest for the truth of Lincoln, not a mythologized superhero, sent by the Heavens to wash the scourge of slavery from the continent, but a real life man, flaws and all. Ferguson goes to the "Lincoln" places in America, to investigate how he has or is being portrayed by the various locations: both positive and negative. Ferguson starts off his book dealing with a controversy I had barely heard about, but seem to remember: the placement of a Lincoln statue in Richmond, VA. Ferguson doesn't shy away from the controversy, but goes to live in it and what's more, understand it. He talks with the men who, with thinly veiled, inferred racist beliefs, wish to paint Lincoln as a warmongering industrialist, whose only goal was to ride roughshod over the defenseless, agrarian South. Attending both a pro and anti-Lincoln conference, Ferguson decries both as unreal, and charts the goal for the rest of his book: to unearth, uncover the real Lincoln. Ferguson's writing style is both information and brisk. He is honest in his love for Lincoln, and how he lost it, and began to recover it through this book. Sometimes, in reading books like this, the story becomes more about the author and less about the subject matter. No worries. Ferguson steps out of the way at times and let's the story shine through. And what a story he tells. This is a wonderful book for any weekend historian, Lincoln enthusiast, or someone itching to get into our country's history a little bit more. If you liked Assassination Vacation or Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War, you'll adore this book. Does Ferguson achieve his goal: yes, in his own way. The Lincoln he unearths is real, bawdy, human, and alive. He also drives home a new point: the Lincoln each of us loves is the Lincoln we all see in ourselves.
22 of 24 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well Done -- Highly Recommended, May 10 2007
By SCDay "SCD" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Land Of Lincoln: Adventures in Abe's America (Hardcover)
Andrew Ferguson is a great writer with a subtle sense of humor. In Land of Lincoln, Ferguson, a self-described "buff" of Abraham Lincoln, checks in on how Lincoln is faring in modern America with asides on how he has fared in the past. The book is alternatively funny and sad: "Lincoln" is certainly firmly rooted in American history and culture, but who exactly is this "Lincoln" is indeterminate -- often a product of the needs of people rather than a free standing figure. The first part of the book is Ferguson traveling to various Lincoln sites solo -- e.g., Richmond, Chicago, and Springfield Illinois. The second part is a forced family journey to sites involving Lincoln in Illinois, Kentucky and Indiana as Ferguson tries to recreate the family journey he took as a child. The book is very well done with funny moments (the anti-Lincoln convention and the Lincoln reenactors convention are great examples) and sad and melancholy discussions (the new disneyfied Lincoln experience in Springfield and the transformation of Lincoln in the Chicago Historical Society). Through it all Ferguson is a a shrewd and understated observed who allows his interviewees to state their cases with little or no comment by Ferguson. Ferguson is clearly a well-educated on the topic of Lincoln and Lincoln Historiography and the book cleary is a labor of love. I'd recommend the book for "serious" and casual Lincoln buffs as well as non-buffs looking for an entertaining, funny, and insightful read.
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