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Willard Sterne Randall

    Willard Sterne Randall est un historien et auteur américain spécialisé dans les biographies de la période coloniale américaine et de la Révolution américaine. Son œuvre explore en profondeur les personnages clés et les moments décisifs qui ont façonné la naissance de la nation. Randall examine avec brio les motivations et les contextes qui ont alimenté la révolution, offrant aux lecteurs une perspective captivante de cette époque formatrice. Ses recherches apportent des éclairages inestimables sur les expériences fondamentales des États-Unis.

    Alexander Hamilton
    The Founders' Fortunes
    Thomas Jefferson
    • Thomas Jefferson

      A Life

      • 736pages
      • 26 heures de lecture
      4,1(1171)Évaluer

      The book delves into Thomas Jefferson's complex character, revealing insights into his philosophical beliefs, political motivations, and personal life. By utilizing firsthand scholarship and the Jefferson Papers, Randall investigates Jefferson's views on slavery and his controversial relationship with Sally Hemmings. Additionally, the narrative explores Jefferson's public and private challenges during pivotal moments in American history, including Revolutionary and diplomatic affairs, providing a nuanced portrait of this influential figure.

      Thomas Jefferson
    • The Founders' Fortunes

      How Money Shaped the Birth of America

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,8(138)Évaluer

      Exploring the intersection of personal finance and politics, this book delves into how the financial situations of the Founding Fathers influenced the creation of the Constitution and the foundations of the United States. It highlights the economic challenges they faced and how their financial decisions impacted the nation's early governance and policies, providing a unique perspective on the historical context of America's formation.

      The Founders' Fortunes
    • Alexander Hamilton

      • 476pages
      • 17 heures de lecture
      3,8(328)Évaluer

      In the first full, one-volume biography of Alexander Hamilton in more than two decades, award-winning historian Willard Sterne Randall takes a fresh look at one of the most brilliant, conflicted, and elusive of our nation's founders. Orphaned at thirteen and apprenticed in a counting house, the precocious Hamilton learned principles of business that helped him, as the first U.S. secretary of the treasury, to create the American banking system and invent the modern corporation. But first the staunch, intrepid Hamilton served in the American Revolution, primarily as aide-de-camp to General Washington, acting as Washington's spymaster. Forging a successful legal career, Hamilton coauthored The Federalist Papers and plunged into politics. Irresistibly attractive to women, he was a man of many gifts, but he could be arrogant and was at times a poor judge of character. In this meticulously researched, illuminating, and lively account, Willard Sterne Randall mines the latest scholarship to provide a new perspective on Alexander Hamilton, his illegitimate birth, little-known military activities, political and diplomatic intrigues, and sometimes scandalous private life. From his less than auspicious start in 1755 on the Caribbean island of Nevis to his untimely death in a duel with his old enemy Aaron Burr in 1804, Alexander Hamilton, despite his short and tragic life, left a huge legacy.

      Alexander Hamilton