Colin Woodard is a Maine native and the author of Ocean's End: Travels Through Endangered Seas. He is a regular contributor to the Christian Science Monitor and the San Francisco Chronicle.
"Fascinating . . . Engrossing . . . a smart read that feels
particularly timely now, when so many would claim a mythically
unified 'founding Fathers' as their political ancestors."
--The Boston Globe
"[I]n offering us a way to better understand the forces at play
in the rumpus room of current American politics, Colin Woodard has
scored a true triumph."
--The Daily Beast "[C]ompelling and informative."
--The Washington Post "Mr. Woodard's approach is breezier than
[David Hackett] Fischer's and more historical than [Joel]
Garreau's, but he has earned a place on the shelf between them.
--The Wall Street Journal "[American Nations] sets itself
apart by delving deep into history to trace our current divides to
ethno-cultural differences that emerged during the country's
earliest settlement."
--The New Republic, Editors' Picks: Best Books of 2011 "Provocative
reading."
--News and Observer "In American Nations, [Colin Woodard]
persuasively reshapes our understanding of how the American
political entity came to be. . . . [A] fascinating new take on
history."
--The Christian Science Monitor "American Nations by
journalist-historian Colin Woodard is a superb book. Woodard makes
a compelling argument that the United Sates was founded by
contradictory regional convictions that continue to influence
current attitudes and policy on a national level. . . . American
Nations smashes the idea of political borders. . . . There is
much to grapple with in this well-written book."
--The Portland Press Herald "[F]or people interested in American
history and sociology, American Nations demands reading. . .
. American Nations is important reading."
--St. Louis Dispatch "[I]f you want to better understand U.S.
politics, history, and culture American Nations is to be
required reading. . . . By revealing this continent of rivals,
American Nations will revolutionize the way Americans think
about their past, their country, and themselves and is sure to
spark controversy."
--The Herald Gazette "Woodard persuasively argues that since the
founding of the United States, eleven distinct geographical
'nations' have formed within the Union, each with its own identity
and set of values."
--Military History Quarterly "Colin Woodard offers up an
illuminating history of North America that explodes the red
state-blue state myth. . . . Woodard's American Nations is a
revolutionary and revelatory take on America's myriad identities,
and how the conflicts between them have shaped our country's past
and mold its future."
--MaineBusiness.com "One of the most original books I read
in the last year. . . . During my five years as an Ambassador in
the United States, I spent a lot of time studying the voting
patterns of different states and reading American history, and I
have to say I find Woodard's thesis to be fully borne out by my own
observations."
--John Bruton, former Prime Minister of Ireland "Woodard
offers a fascinating way to parse American (writ large) politics
and history in this excellent book."
--Kirkus (starred review) "Provocative."
--Publishers Weekly "[W]ell-researched analysis with appeal to both
casual and scholarly readers."
--Library Journal
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