Reviews

Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow

gadicohen93's review against another edition

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4.0

This book was so much fun – in the way it uprooted quai-religious figures out of the history books and mutilated their Mt. Rushmore reputations, so that, in the end, I’ve come away believing that the Greatest Generation may not have been so great individually, but together were able to consolidate a great nation.

It feels like I started this book a lifetime ago. Chernow transported me to the jam-packed life of Alexander more than anybody else (though JJ Ellis, Lin-Manuel Miranda, and my APUSH teacher all come in close seconds.) The sweltering Caribbean hellhole of his deplorable upbringing; the forests and fields of his guerilla days as Washington’s aide-de-camp; the heady days he spent as finance secretary … this full portrait of Hamilton & environs was riveting. The writing ticked forward, expertly sewing together excerpts from letters and articles and stories passed down through the ages, as well as historical details and character sketches that came at just the right places.

I was astonished at how deeply Jefferson reviled Hamilton and at the efforts he took to tarnish Hamilton’s public character, so much so that I feel like Chernow may have painted old Thomas with a little too much chiaroscuro. (Most historians I've read do this, too, depicting TJ as a sly, hypocritical, fervent politician). Though to Chernow’s credit, no character escaped the heavy shading of his brush. Even Hamilton himself (whom Chernow lionizes), in the last half-decade of his life, went bonkers with bombastic, petty revenge fantasies and militaristic dreams of conquering empires a la France and Spain – not to mention his foolish “affair(s) of honor.”

GW came off as an unschooled bore with anger management problems, chaperoned by Hamilton throughout his entire presidency; Madison was a mousy introvert who turned his back on Hamilton as well as on the principles of the Constitution the moment his fellow Virginian TJ landed from France; Adams was a sensitive, petulant, ungrateful homebody; Monroe might’ve been actually evil.

It is my favorite thing about this era in history: the raucous divisions that emerged out of the cohesion of the Revolution, fueled by petty personal hatreds but also deeply representative of the fissures in American society itself. Greater-than-life characters are torn down but built up again, zits and all. But Hamilton might've been the most underrated one. Hamilton – the most partisan figure of all the Framers, a "bastard" and foreign "orphan" – was able to do so much, setting in place a financial system that's lasted through the ages, as well as deftly navigating the executive branch for Washington. He was a really inspiring man and Chernow does justice to his name.

chapita4's review against another edition

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5.0

"Who lives, who dies, who tells your story?" I (like many others) have been obsessed with the music of Hamilton and when a librarian recommended the book that inspired it all I didn't want to miss my shot. Given that our current political climate is divisive/explosive/full of conflict..(don't forget peeps..."History has it's eyes on you"), I thought I'd give it a read. I wish more history books were written as well as this is, although a lot is probably due to the amazing life of Alexander Hamilton. I haven't been able to stop talking about history, the things that Hamilton overcame in order to make it to America and the impact that just one person can have on the future of a country.

lbrems's review against another edition

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informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0

mmoy's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

4.75

maddyae's review against another edition

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informative

5.0

proffy's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative medium-paced

5.0

alexa_gee's review against another edition

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challenging dark informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0

The best narration ever!
Marked as finished (I think I've listened to the whole thing by now) but I'll honestly just pop on any chapter when I'm driving or doing housework.
Easy to get in to, very informative.

I would break this up by reading other stuff at the same time.

In terms of actual content: just excellent. Ron Chernow clearly has a great respect for Hamilton and writes very well.
It is academic in style but not too dry.

aceinit's review against another edition

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5.0

Incredibly detailed and vividly written to bring life not only to its subject, but to the other Founding Fathers and denizens of Hamilton's world. Don't let the size of this volume intimidate you. It is easily one of the most engaging biographies I have ever read, and it has me excited to read more of Chernow's work.

rosalyn007's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging emotional hopeful informative inspiring slow-paced

5.0