A fascinating book- informative and entertaining

Daily Telegraph

Keneally has a novelist's sense of pace, a mellifluous prose style and a profound sympathy for his characters

Sunday Times

This has a thriller-ish propulsion-a highly readable book

Sunday Express

See all

A great piece of storytelling

Guardian

On the last, cold Sunday of February 1859, Daniel Sickles shot his wife's lover in Washington's Lafayette Square, just across from the White House. This is the story of that killing and its repercussions. Charming and ambitious, Dan Sickles literally got away with murder. His protector was none other than the President himself, James Buchanan; his political friends quickly gathered around; and Sickles was acquitted. His trial is described with all Thomas Keneally's powers of dash and drama, against a backdrop of double-dealing, intrigue and slavery. Enslaved, in her turn, by the hypocrisy of nineteenth-century society, his wife was shunned and thereafter banned from public life. Sickles, meanwhile, was free to accept favours and patronage. He raised a regiment for the Union, and went on to become a general in the army, rising to the rank of brigadier-general and commanding a flak at the Battle of Gettysburg - at which he lost a leg, which he put into the military museum in Washington where he would take friends to visit it. Thomas Keneally brilliantly recreates an extraordinary period, when women were punished for violating codes of society that did not bind men. And the caddish, good-looking Dan Sickles personifies the extremes of the era: as a womaniser, he introduced his favourite madam to Queen Victoria while his wife stayed at home, and he installed his housekeeper as his mistress while his second wife took up residence nearby. American Scoundrel is the lens through which the reader can view history at a time when America was being torn apart.
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And the caddish, good-looking Dan Sickles personifies the extremes of the era: as a womaniser, he introduced his favourite madam to Queen Victoria while his wife stayed at home, and he installed his housekeeper as his mistress while his second wife took up residence nearby.
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'A great piece of storytelling' Guardian 20021018

Product details

ISBN
9780099285991
Published
2003-03-06
Publisher
Vintage Publishing; Vintage
Weight
289 gr
Height
198 mm
Width
129 mm
Thickness
24 mm
Age
01, G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
416

Biographical note

Thomas Keneally won the Booker Prize with Schindler's Ark which was subsequently made into the internationally acclaimed film Schindler's List, directed by Steven Spielberg. His non-fiction includes an entertaining book on the American Civil War, American Scoundrel, and a superb epic about the Iirhs diaspora, The Great Shame.