Sidney Blumenthal's first volume, A Self-Made Man, wove a broad and intricate counterpoint between the young life of Abraham Lincoln and the politics of Jacksonian America. Blumenthal extends that superb counterpoint in Wrestling With His Angel, giving us the best account we have of the big-screen context of Lincoln and the explosive political events during the decade he strode to the front of the American stage. Blumenthal illuminates the path Lincoln hewed to greatness. This is the best political history we have had of Abraham Lincoln since James G. Randall and Allan Nevins. -- Allen Guelzo, author of Gettysburg, winner of the Lincoln Prize
Sidney Blumenthal has achieved something quite unexpected: he has rescued the Lincoln most Americans know only as an icon, and turned him back into a real human being, revealing a clever and adroit politician, a fixer of conventions, and a political operator whose ambitions are surpassed only by his searing moral vision. -- Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
A timely and important book. Rather than diminishing his sympathy for the 16th President's inner turmoil, Blumenthal's `long historical view' has yielded an exceptionally nuanced and compassionate portrait of Lincoln and the circumstances that shaped his career. -- Amanda Foreman, author of A World on Fire: Britain's Crucial Role in the American Civil War
Wrestling With His Angel is a raucous and epic voyage through the turbulent political waters of the age that made Abraham Lincoln. Blumenthal has crafted a Melvillian narrative of the era of secession and the men who navigated it. Completely mesmerizing, a deeply serious meditation with the keen sense of humor that Lincoln so famously had. -- John Witt, author of the Lincoln's Code, winner of the Bancroft Prize
Wrestling With His Angel is dramatic narrative history, prophetic and intimate-painfully at times. Blumenthal makes our nation's moral cleavage appear tragically ordained, perhaps insurmountable, which renders his luminous portrait of Lincoln all the more revelatory. -- Diane McWhorter, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Carry Me Home
In the second volume of his masterful biography, Sidney Blumenthal tells the story of Lincoln's political self-fashioning in the 1850s, and his entrance onto the stage of history. With vigorous prose, deep knowledge, and energetic narrative momentum, Blumenthal shows how Lincoln defined himself against his rival Stephen Douglas, learned how to become a persuasive orator, fortified his intellectual opposition to slavery, and fought the anti-immigrant Know-Nothing party that was dominating American politics. Read it for a total immersion in pre-Civil War politics that has startling relevance to our own era. -- Elaine Showalter, author of The Civil Wars of Julia Ward Howe
Blumenthal immerses the reader in American politics in the years between Lincoln's return to Springfield, after completing his term in the House of Representatives, and his contribute to founding the Illinois Republican Party. * Publishers Weekly *
An ambitious old-fashioned ensemble piece, history as theater, which sets the stage for the Civil War. . . . we have two more volumes to anticipate from Blumenthal's finely etched drama of history, illuminating Lincoln's craggy character in a fuller, clearer light. * U.S. News & World Report *
Masterful * The Los Angeles Times *
Magnificent . . . Blumenthal explores in superbly researched and beautifully written detail the crucial period when Lincoln's public and private statements began to reflect a moderate politician with radical thoughts. . . . extremely well done, and anyone interested in Lincoln's political career will want to read it. * Bookpage *
[Blumenthal] provides the deep and often lurid background of the age in which Lincoln lived, operated, practiced law, raised a family, and became a political genius. . . . This soon to be four-volume biography of Lincoln is the most readable to date and promises to be a modern classic in understanding Lincoln's life. * Civil War Book Review *
Everything and everyone in Blumenthal's rich study of 19th-century political life acts upon the man who became the 16th president in 1861. . . . Wrestling With His Angel contains fascinating portraits of other historical figures. . . . monumental. * The Guardian *
Blumenthal brings a sharp, battle-honed political mind to the task of re-telling this seemingly familiar story. . . . His feel for the heat of partisan combat gives his book a sense of immediacy and excitement. More than that, he draws insightful parallels between the bitter political fights of the 19th and 21st centuries, suggesting that the great moral divides of the past are still with us today. . . . Wrestling With His Angel manages to put flesh on the dry bones of forgotten political characters. . . . Wrestling With His Angel retells this crucial chapter in Lincoln's story with fresh eyes, ones that don't miss its relevance to today. * Pittsburgh Post-Gazette *
A deeply fascinating story in an often overlooked period of Lincoln's life. . . . Blumenthal draws one vivid picture after another of these least-known years of Lincoln's life . . . intelligent and rigorous. * Christian Science Monitor *
Blumenthal is urgent, unflagging, so full of a sense of an impending doom for the republic that, by the end of the book, it almost seems beyond belief that any one person could rise equal to the task of saving it. -- Allen Guelzo * Washington Monthly *
Blumenthal has spent his life in the interconnected worlds of politics and journalism, and it shows: He grasps that political genius in ways others could not, making Lincoln more politically plausible. * The Washington Post *
A sprawling account of the larger political history of the United States * The New York Review of Books *
Grippingly and gracefully written. * James Fallows, The Atlantic *
Magisterial . . . A vividly written, wide-ranging and often surprising account of the president-to-be. * The New York Times Book Review *
Another must-read book in Blumenthal's four-part series on the political life of Abraham Lincoln. * Lincolnian *
Captivating . . . compelling. * The American Prospect *
A sweeping narrative of antebellum American politics. * The Nation *
With extraordinary research and deft prose, Blumenthal provides a full and convincing portrait of Lincoln during his years of supposed retreat from politics. * The Post and Courier *