T. J. Stiles has held the Gilder Lehrman Fellowship in American
History at the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and
Writers at the New York Public Library, taught at Columbia
University, and served as adviser for the PBS series The American
Experience. His first book, Jesse James- Last Rebel of the Civil
War, won the Ambassador Book Award and the Peter Seaborg Award for
Civil War Scholarship, and was a New York Times Notable Book. The
First Tycoon won the National Book Award in 2009. He has written
for The New York Times Book Review, Salon.com, Smithsonian, and the
Los Angeles Times. He lives in San Francisco.
Visit the author's website at www.tjstiles.com.
A The New York Times Notable Book
A Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, The New Yorker, Boston
Globe, Christian Science Monitor, and Kansas City Star Book of the
Year
“A mighty—and mighty confident—work. . . . This is state-of-the-art
biography. . . . The First Tycoon has been widely praised, and
rightly so. . . . This is state-of-the-art biography.”
—The New York Times
“Superbly written and researched. . . . Worthy of its subject.”
—The Economist
“Truly remarkable. . . . A landmark study that significantly
enhances one’s understanding of U.S. economic history. . . .
[Stiles is] one of the most exciting writers in the field.”
—Foreign Affairs
“Stiles has painted a full-bodied, nuanced picture of the man. . .
. Elegance of style and fair-minded intent illuminate Stiles’s
latest, expectedly profound exploration of American culture in the
raw.”
—The Boston Globe
“Stiles, a superb researcher, has unearthed quantities of new
material and crafted them into the illuminating, authoritative
portrait of Vanderbilt that has been missing for so long.”
—The Washington Post
“Very absorbing. . . . Much more than a biography. The book is
filled with important, exhaustively researched and indeed
fascinating details that would profit every student of American
business and social history to read.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Stiles writes with both the panache of a fine journalist and the
analytical care of a seasoned scholar. And he offers a fruitful way
to think about the larger history of American elites as well as the
life of one of their most famous members.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Vanderbilt’s story is indeed epic, and so is The First Tycoon. . .
. Stiles is a perceptive and witty writer with a remarkable ability
to paint a picture of the America in which Vanderbilt lived.”
—The Christian Science Monitor
“Fascinating. . . . A reminder that Vanderbilt’s life and times
still have much to teach us.”
—Newsweek
“Gracefully written. . . . [Vanderbilt] was the right man in the
right place at the right time, and the meticulous Stiles seems to
be the right man to tell us about it.”
—St. Petersburg Times
“Stiles has given us a balanced and absorbing biography of this
colorful and often ruthless entrepreneur.”
—James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War
Era
“Monumental. . . . Arresting. . . . Stiles has a gift for making
readers admire unsavory characters. . . . [The First Tycoon]
resembles a five-course meal at a three-star restaurant: rich and
pleasurable.”
—Bloomberg.com
“Engrossing and provocative. . . . Stiles draws on exhaustive
archival research to clear away the apocryphal and celebrate
Vanderbilt as an American icon.”
—Tulsa World
“At long last a biography worthy of the Commodore, meticulously
researched, superbly written, and filled with original
insights.”
—Maury Klein, author of The Life and Legend of Jay Gould
“Stiles writes with the magisterial sweep of a great historian and
the keen psychological insight of a great biographer. . . . With
panache and admirable ease, Stiles maps the financial and political
currents on which Vanderbilt buccaneered and shows that it was
Vanderbilt, more than anyone else, who enabled business to evolve
into Big Business.”
—Patricia O’Toole, author of When Trumpets Call: Theodore Roosevelt
After the White House
“A brilliant exposition of the life of Cornelius Vanderbilt and the
entrepreneurial environment that he shaped. Readers will look at
Grand Central Station and much else in American life with fresh
eyes.”
—Joyce Appleby, author of The Relentless Revolution: A History of
Capitalism
“The definitive biography of Commodore Vanderbilt. Both as portrait
of an American original and as a book that brings to life an
important slice of American history long neglected, this is
biography at its very best. A magnificent achievement.”
—Arthur Vanderbilt II, author of Fortune’s Children: The Fall of
the House of Vanderbilt
“Stiles brings the Commodore, warts and all, to life in this new
study, which is at once up-to-date in scholarly terms, analytically
incisive, and lucidly written.”
—Raleigh News and Observer
“Sweeping. . . . [A] magisterial, exemplary work . . . [that]
offers entry into the storm-tossed world of our current tycoons and
the rough waters they have piloted us into.”
—American History Magazine
“Superbly researched and elegantly written. . . . Stiles’s will
likely prove to be the definitive biography of this epic
entrepreneur.”
—Philanthropy Magazine
A The New York Times Notable Book
A Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, The New Yorker,
Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, and Kansas City
Star Book of the Year
"A mighty-and mighty confident-work. . . . This is state-of-the-art
biography. . . . The First Tycoon has been widely praised,
and rightly so. . . . This is state-of-the-art biography."
-The New York Times
"Superbly written and researched. . . . Worthy of its subject."
-The Economist
"Truly remarkable. . . . A landmark study that significantly
enhances one's understanding of U.S. economic history. . . .
[Stiles is] one of the most exciting writers in the field."
-Foreign Affairs
"Stiles has painted a full-bodied, nuanced picture of the man. . .
. Elegance of style and fair-minded intent illuminate Stiles's
latest, expectedly profound exploration of American culture in the
raw."
-The Boston Globe
"Stiles, a superb researcher, has unearthed quantities of new
material and crafted them into the illuminating, authoritative
portrait of Vanderbilt that has been missing for so long."
-The Washington Post
"Very absorbing. . . . Much more than a biography. The book is
filled with important, exhaustively researched and indeed
fascinating details that would profit every student of American
business and social history to read."
-San Francisco Chronicle
"Stiles writes with both the panache of a fine journalist and the
analytical care of a seasoned scholar. And he offers a fruitful way
to think about the larger history of American elites as well as the
life of one of their most famous members."
-The New York Times Book Review
"Vanderbilt's story is indeed epic, and so is The First
Tycoon. . . . Stiles is a perceptive and witty writer with a
remarkable ability to paint a picture of the America in which
Vanderbilt lived."
-The Christian Science Monitor
"Fascinating. . . . A reminder that Vanderbilt's life and times
still have much to teach us."
-Newsweek
"Gracefully written. . . . [Vanderbilt] was the right man in the
right place at the right time, and the meticulous Stiles seems to
be the right man to tell us about it."
-St. Petersburg Times
"Stiles has given us a balanced and absorbing biography of this
colorful and often ruthless entrepreneur."
-James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil
War Era
"Monumental. . . . Arresting. . . . Stiles has a gift for making
readers admire unsavory characters. . . . [The First Tycoon]
resembles a five-course meal at a three-star restaurant: rich and
pleasurable."
-Bloomberg.com
"Engrossing and provocative. . . . Stiles draws on exhaustive
archival research to clear away the apocryphal and celebrate
Vanderbilt as an American icon."
-Tulsa World
"At long last a biography worthy of the Commodore, meticulously
researched, superbly written, and filled with original
insights."
-Maury Klein, author of The Life and Legend of Jay Gould
"Stiles writes with the magisterial sweep of a great historian and
the keen psychological insight of a great biographer. . . . With
panache and admirable ease, Stiles maps the financial and political
currents on which Vanderbilt buccaneered and shows that it was
Vanderbilt, more than anyone else, who enabled business to evolve
into Big Business."
-Patricia O'Toole, author of When Trumpets Call: Theodore
Roosevelt After the White House
"A brilliant exposition of the life of Cornelius Vanderbilt and the
entrepreneurial environment that he shaped. Readers will look at
Grand Central Station and much else in American life with fresh
eyes."
-Joyce Appleby, author of The Relentless Revolution: A History
of Capitalism
"The definitive biography of Commodore Vanderbilt. Both as portrait
of an American original and as a book that brings to life an
important slice of American history long neglected, this is
biography at its very best. A magnificent achievement."
-Arthur Vanderbilt II, author of Fortune's Children: The Fall of
the House of Vanderbilt
"Stiles brings the Commodore, warts and all, to life in this new
study, which is at once up-to-date in scholarly terms, analytically
incisive, and lucidly written."
-Raleigh News and Observer
"Sweeping. . . . [A] magisterial, exemplary work . . . [that]
offers entry into the storm-tossed world of our current tycoons and
the rough waters they have piloted us into."
-American History Magazine
"Superbly researched and elegantly written. . . . Stiles's will
likely prove to be the definitive biography of this epic
entrepreneur."
-Philanthropy Magazine
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