Historian Holton (American history, Univ. of South Carolina), a National Book Award finalist for
Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution, writes a new history of the American Revolution that explains why free colonists decided to declare independence and fight a grisly, protracted war with Britain. He identifies conditions that influenced the American Revolution in astonishing ways, including the global and domestic economic impact of the Seven Years’ War; the fight for freedom of people marginalized by the U.S. colonies, including enslaved people, Indigenous peoples, and Black Americans; the self-assertiveness of Evangelical Christianity; non-human factors (weather, geography, and disease); and internal social and economic conflicts and conspiracies. He warns readers about the popular myths, errors, and inadequacies in many over-simplified Revolutionary War histories that rely primarily on the Founding Fathers’ writings and deeds. Holton’s detailed account, spanning from 1763 to 1795, reveals little-known factors that gradually transformed resistance into rebellion, and complexities of military decisions and encounters gone wrong and of the war’s far-reaching and enduring aftermath.
VERDICT Holton’s exhaustive, masterfully written chronicle demonstrates that the Revolution was much more than a movement instigated by the political ideologies of a handful of elite, revered (although flawed) Founding Fathers against the British parliament and king. This book will be pivotal for scholars and requested by American history enthusiasts.
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