It begins with the search for hallowed ground, the exact place
from which Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address. In
bleak November, Kent Gramm makes a pilgrimage to the most famous
battleground in American history and over the course of a month
transforms his search into a discovery of the meaning of Lincoln s
elegy for America s identity.
For Gramm, the century that began with Lincoln s address and ended
with the assassinations of the 1960s saw the destruction of the
'modern' world and with it America s sense of purpose. The book
reflects on the November anniversaries of public events such as the
Armistice that ended World War One, Kristallnacht, the
assassination of John F. Kennedy, the death of C. S. Lewis, the
first major battle of the Vietnam War, and the publication of
Robert F. Kennedy s To Seek a Newer World, and also on private
events in Gramm s family history, provide the occasions for Gramm s
meditations on public and private heroism, on modernism s hopes and
postmodern despair. In November, he asks us to seek a path toward
the 'new birth of freedom' that Lincoln envisioned at
Gettysburg.
"The month begins with things that perish. But ultimately,
November is a journey of hope, as was Lincoln s journey to
Gettysburg. So too I will journey to Gettysburg in these pages.
Like Lincoln s fellow citizens, I go there to assuage personal
grief, to find answers; and I hope, for me as for them, that my
personal sorrows become a vehicle for larger answers and a larger
purpose. Lincoln addressed their grief, why not mine; he gave his
generation purpose, why not ours.""
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