It is 1828. After 9-years of living in France, Harvard graduate David Chase returned to the United States upon his father's death. He was left nothing. Near penniless, he sought employment; he was a writer. As luck would have it, William Short was looking for someone to write the definitive biography of Andrew Jackson. Chase accepted the commission.
While the presidential campaign of 1828 is played like a chess game between Andrew Jackson and President John Quincy Adams, Chase interacts with a wide variety of historical figures from the era. In the background, the biography of Andrew Jackson is told as chapters of Chase's book. The New Orleans campaign dominates the biography and is the source of Jackson's fame.
The book uses point-of-view characters - some real, some fictional - to tell its story.
- Andrew Jackson is central character but has a limited role as a POV character. Painted as a man of iron will, volcanic anger, bristling gray hair, and a stick thin bean pole, Jackson is not the illiterate backwoodsman that many thought.
- John Coffee has been Jackson's friend and ally for forty years. A bear of a man who serves as Jackson's right hand, he plays a large role in protecting Jackson from scandal and managing the campaign with Alexander Hamilton's son, James.
- John Quincy Adams is a disciplined man of great intellect and talent, but a complete lack of charisma. His son, Charles Francis Adams, serves as his secretary and his wife, Louisa, is unhappy. Adams comes across as hapless, though entirely laudable.
Fictional POV characters:
- David Chase is a fictional character who crisscrosses the country to research his Jackson biography. Though American by birth, he feels like an outsider thanks to his many years in France. Washington City is a backwater compared to Paris and Nashville even more so. Nonetheless, he finds himself admiring Jackson with each new chapter he writes.
- Mr. Hogwood, an Englishman, proved to be the first writer that William Short had employed. Though dismissed in favor of Chase, Hogwood provided his research so far to Chase and made introductions to his contacts in Washington City. Many of the early chapters of Jackson's life are written by Hogwood.
- Emma Colden is Hogwood's beautiful daughter and the object of Chase's desire. An aspiring writer herself, she frequently complains that women are not allowed such freedoms. When she is the POV, it is usually when there is an interview with noteworthy women such as Louisa Adams or Fanny Wright.
The book paints an excellent picture of America in 1828, from Boston, to Washington City, to Nashville, to New Orleans. Historical figures such as John Randolph, Sam Houston, John Eaton, Nicholas Trist, George Ticknor, Sarah Hale, Frances Milton Trollope, and many more have something to say about the campaign, America, women's rights, slavery, Jackson, Jefferson, and other subjects. Here is a dynamic country where technology is racing and possibilities are limitless.
Outstanding book and highly recommended.

No comments:
Post a Comment