Master of the Mountain : Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves by Henry Wiencek (2012, Compact Disc, Unabridged edition)

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Is there anything new to say about Thomas Jefferson and slavery? The answer is a resounding yes. Henry Wiencek's eloquent, persuasive book-based on new information coming from archaeological work at Monticello and on hitherto overlooked or disregarded evidence in Jefferson's papers-opens up a huge, poorly understood dimension of Jefferson's world. We must, Wiencek suggests, follow the money.   So far historians have offered only easy irony or paradox to explain this extraordinary Founding Father who was an emancipationist in his youth and then recoiled from his own inspiring rhetoric and equivocated about slavery, who enjoyed his renown as a revolutionary leader yet kept some of his own children as slaves. But Wiencek's Jefferson is a man of business and public affairs who makes a success of his debt-ridden plantation thanks to what he calls the "silent profits" gained from his slaves-and thanks to a skewed moral universe that he and thousands of others readily inhabited.   Many people of Jefferson's time saw a catastrophe coming and tried to stop it, but not Jefferson. The pursuit of happiness had been badly distorted, and an oligarchy was getting very rich. Is this the quintessential American story?

Product Identifiers

PublisherHighbridge Company
ISBN-101611749891
ISBN-139781611749892
eBay Product ID (ePID)117180560

Product Key Features

Publication Year2012
TopicSlavery, Presidents & Heads of State
Book TitleMaster of the Mountain : Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves
LanguageEnglish
GenreBiography & Autobiography, Social Science
AuthorHenry Wiencek
FormatCompact Disc

Dimensions

Item Height1.1in.
Item Length5.3in.
Item Weight8 Oz
Item Width6.4in.

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
Dewey Edition23
Reviews"Narrator Brian Holsopple has a deep, distinctive voice that captures our attention and is easy to listen to. He has terrific diction and paces the story well, enabling us to follow the account while allowing us time to analyze what we've heard."       - AudioFile, "Narrator Brian Holsopple does an excellent job. This audiobook provides a troubling aspect of a complex man and the skewed moral universe in which he lived; recommended to all listeners."       -- Library Journal, "Wiencek's method--to present the facts . . . allowing the reader to form her own interpretation before he presents his--makes for a far more persuasive and devastating indictment. Every American should read it."       -- Salon, "Wiencek's method-to present the facts . . . allowing the reader to form her own interpretation before he presents his-makes for a far more persuasive and devastating indictment. Every American should read it."       - Salon, Remarkable re-creation of Monticello's economy and culture. . . . Whether you agree or disagree with Wiencek's provocative analysis, it's a book worth taking seriously as we continue to stuggle with slavery's legacy.       - BookPage, "Well-rendered yet deeply unsettling. . . . Wiencek scours the primary sources . . . for a thoughtful reexamination of what was really going on behind the harmonious façade of the great house on the mountain. . . . Beautifully constructed reflections and careful sifting of Jefferson's thoughts and deeds."        - Kirkus Reviews [HC starred review], Clearly delivered and [Holsopple's] reading of the text was free of insinuation, even when Jefferson's hypocrisy was at its most obvious. [Holsopple] played it straight and let the text speak for itself, which should be the goal of every reader of histories. . . . I highly recommend it.       - DWD's Reviews, "Remarkable re-creation of Monticello's economy and culture. . . . Whether you agree or disagree with Wiencek's provocative analysis, it's a book worth taking seriously as we continue to stuggle with slavery's legacy."       -- BookPage, "Remarkable re-creation of Monticello's economy and culture. . . . Whether you agree or disagree with Wiencek's provocative analysis, it's a book worth taking seriously as we continue to stuggle with slavery's legacy."       - BookPage, This meticulous account indicts not only Jefferson but modern apologists who wish to retain him as a moral standard of liberty. Wiencek's vivid, detailed history casts a new slant on a complex man.        - Publishers Weekly [HC starred review], "Narrator Brian Holsopple has a deep, distinctive voice that captures our attention and is easy to listen to. He has terrific diction and paces the story well, enabling us to follow the account while allowing us time to analyze what we've heard."       -- AudioFile, Narrator Brian Holsopple has a deep, distinctive voice that captures our attention and is easy to listen to. He has terrific diction and paces the story well, enabling us to follow the account while allowing us time to analyze what we've heard.       - AudioFile, "Wiencek brilliantly and comprehensively re-evaluates the revolutionary-turned-slave-owner's reputation, questioning why America holds Jefferson as a pillar in its moral composition. Jefferson did not heed the requests of his peers to free his slaves, and, now--two centuries later--he is exposed as a beneficiary of America's selective historical memory. "       -- Milwaukee Express, "Clearly delivered and [Holsopple's] reading of the text was free of insinuation, even when Jefferson's hypocrisy was at its most obvious. [Holsopple] played it straight and let the text speak for itself, which should be the goal of every reader of histories. . . . I highly recommend it."       -- DWD's Reviews, "Wiencek's method-to present the facts . . . allowing the reader to form her own interpretation before he presents his-makes for a far more persuasive and devastating indictment. Every American should read it."       -- Salon, "Wiencek's method--to present the facts . . . allowing the reader to form her own interpretation before he presents his--makes for a far more persuasive and devastating indictment. Every American should read it."       - Salon, Wiencek's method-to present the facts . . . allowing the reader to form her own interpretation before he presents his-makes for a far more persuasive and devastating indictment. Every American should read it.       -- Salon, "Narrator Brian Holsopple does an excellent job. This audiobook provides a troubling aspect of a complex man and the skewed moral universe in which he lived; recommended to all listeners."       - Library Journal, "This meticulous account indicts not only Jefferson but modern apologists who wish to retain him as a moral standard of liberty. Wiencek's vivid, detailed history casts a new slant on a complex man."        - Publishers Weekly [HC starred review], "Well-rendered yet deeply unsettling. . . . Wiencek scours the primary sources . . . for a thoughtful reexamination of what was really going on behind the harmonious faade of the great house on the mountain. . . . Beautifully constructed reflections and careful sifting of Jefferson's thoughts and deeds." -- Kirkus Reviews [HC starred review], "Wiencek's method--to present the facts . . . allowing the reader to form her own interpretation before he presents his--makes for a far more persuasive and devastating indictment. Every American should read it."       — Salon, Wiencek brilliantly and comprehensively re-evaluates the revolutionary-turned-slave-owner's reputation, questioning why America holds Jefferson as a pillar in its moral composition. Jefferson did not heed the requests of his peers to free his slaves, and, now-two centuries later-he is exposed as a beneficiary of America's selective historical memory.       - Milwaukee Express, "Clearly delivered and [Holsopple's] reading of the text was free of insinuation, even when Jefferson's hypocrisy was at its most obvious. [Holsopple] played it straight and let the text speak for itself, which should be the goal of every reader of histories. . . . I highly recommend it."       - DWD's Reviews, "Wiencek brilliantly and comprehensively re-evaluates the revolutionary-turned-slave-owner's reputation, questioning why America holds Jefferson as a pillar in its moral composition. Jefferson did not heed the requests of his peers to free his slaves, and, now--two centuries later--he is exposed as a beneficiary of America's selective historical memory. " -- Milwaukee Express, Well-rendered yet deeply unsettling. . . . Wiencek scours the primary sources . . . for a thoughtful reexamination of what was really going on behind the harmonious façade of the great house on the mountain. . . . Beautifully constructed reflections and careful sifting of Jefferson's thoughts and deeds.        - Kirkus Reviews [HC starred review]
Number of Volumes9 Vols.
Dewey Decimal973.4/6092
Edition DescriptionUnabridged Edition
Number of Pages660 Pages
Narrated byHolsopple, Brian

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