"Often crosses paths with Kenneth Roberts's historical novels
"Arundel" and "Rabble in Arms" and it makes a fine successor to
those splendid books."
--Allen D. Boyer
"New York Times Book Review"
"Both a biography and an extended meditation on the ironies of
the Revolution, "Benedict Arnold, Revolutionary Hero" is in many
ways a remarkable example of the historian's craft. . . . .[an]
indispensable guide."
--"Los Angeles Times"
"Restores Arnold to the pantheon of American war heroes."
--"New England Quarterly
"Martin discloses a new and entirely credible Benedict
Arnold."
--"The William and Mary Quarterly"
"Martin's thorough primary-source research--the best in any
biography of Arnold to date--underpins convincing explanations for
both Arnold's intense revolutionary zeal and his subsequent
betrayal. The book offers essential lessons to modern military
officers."
--"Journal of Military History"
Benedict Arnold stands as one of the most vilified figures in
American history. Stories of his treason have so come to define him
that his name, like that of Judas, is virtually synonymous with
treason.
Yet Arnold was one of the most heroic and remarkable men of his
time, indeed in all of American history. A brilliant military
leader of uncommon bravery, Arnold dedicated himself to the
Revolutionary cause, sacrificing family life, health, and financial
well-being for a conflict that left him physically crippled,
sullied by false accusations, and profoundly alienated from the
American cause of liberty. By viewing Arnold's life backward
through the prism of his treason, we invariably succumb to the
demonizations that arose only after his abandonment of the
rebelforces. We thereby overlook his critical role as one of the
influential actors in the American Revolution.
Distinguished historian James Kirby Martin's landmark biography,
the result of a decade's labor, stands as an invaluable antidote to
this historical distortion. Careful not to endow the Revolutionary
generation with mythical proportions of virtue, Martin shows how
self-serving, venal behavior was just as common in the
Revolutionary era as in our own time. Arnold, a deeply committed
patriot, suffered acutely because of his lack of political savvy in
dealing with those who attacked his honor and reputation. Tracing
Arnold's life, from his difficult childhood through his grueling
winter trek across the howling Maine wilderness, his valiant
defense of Lake Champlain, and his crucial role in the Quebec and
Saratoga campaigns, Martin has given us an entirely new perspective
on this dramatic and exceptional life, set against the tumultuous
background of the American Revolution.
General
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