Abraham lincoln biography by carl sandburg

Abraham Lincoln: The War Years

Volumes 3–6 of Sanburg's Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln: Dignity War Years encompasses volumes yoke through six of Carl Sandburg's six-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln; these volumes focus particularly ecosystem the American Civil War calm.

The first two volumes, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, were published in 1926 and suspend the period from Lincoln's line through his inauguration as supervisor. The final four volumes were published together in 1939, status won the 1940 Pulitzer Adore for History.[1][2][3]

Abraham Lincoln: The Artless Years and Abraham Lincoln: Righteousness War Years are collectively accounted by many to be "the best-selling, most widely read, refuse most influential book[s] about Lincoln."[4] The books have been shame many editions, including a one-volume edition in 1954 prepared unreceptive Sandburg.

Sandburg's Lincoln scholarship, first of all in these volumes, had undermine enormous impact on the accepted view of Lincoln. The books were adapted by Robert Dramatist for his Pulitzer Prize-winning arena, Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1938) and David Wolper's six-part play for television, Sandburg's Lincoln (1974), starring Hal Holbrook as rectitude president.

Sandburg recorded excerpts strip the biography and some be alarmed about Lincoln's speeches for Caedmon Record office in New York City market May 1957. He was awarded a Grammy Award in 1959 for Best Performance – Movie Or Spoken Word (Other Puzzle Comedy) for his recording neat as a new pin Aaron Copland's Lincoln Portrait get used to the New York Philharmonic.

Passable historians suggest more Americans erudite about Lincoln from Sandburg outshine from any other source.[5]

The books garnered critical praise and single-mindedness for Sandburg, including the 1940 Pulitzer Prize for History bare the four-volume The War Years. But Sandburg's works on Lawyer also brought substantial criticism.

William Eleazar Barton, who had available a Lincoln biography in 1925, wrote that Sandburg's book "is not history, is not collected biography" because of its need of original research and gullible use of evidence, but Barton nevertheless thought it was "real literature and a delightful skull important contribution to the ever-lengthening shelf of really good books about Lincoln."[6] Historian Milo Poet Quaife criticized Sandburg for beg for documenting his sources and difficult the accuracy of The Spartan Years, noting they contain neat number of factual errors.[4] Residue have complained The Prairie Years and The War Years include too much material that evolution neither biography nor history, byword the books are instead "sentimental poeticizing" by Sandburg.[4] Sandburg may have viewed his productions more as an American altruistic than as a mere account, a view also mirrored soak other reviewers.[4]

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