Sabtu, 05 Februari 2011

Download PDF The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery

Download PDF The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery

Exactly how is your time to spend the free time in this day? Are you beginning to do a brand-new activity? Will you attempt to check out? Everybody recognizes and concurs that reading is a great practice. You should read and read, additionally guide with lots of advantages. But, is that true? There are only few people who like to read. If you are among them, it is great for you. We will certainly provide you a brand-new book that could make your life enhanced to be better.

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery


The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery


Download PDF The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery

Learning is a procedure that will be gone through by all people in every age. In this case, we have constantly guides that must be accumulated and also review. The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery is just one of the books that we always advise for you in finding out. This is the way exactly how you learn related to the subject. When you have the existence of guides, you need to see how this publication is really recommended.

The existence of this publication is not just recognized by the people in the country. Lots of societies from outside nations will certainly also enjoy this publication as the analysis source. The intriguing subject as well as classic subject turn into one of the all needs to manage reading this book. The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery also includes the interesting packaging beginning with the cover design and its title, just how the writer brings the visitors to obtain right into words, and also exactly how the writer tells the web content magnificently.

Are you curious about mainly publications The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery If you are still perplexed on which one of guide The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery that ought to be bought, it is your time to not this website to search for. Today, you will need this The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery as the most referred publication and also the majority of required book as resources, in other time, you can appreciate for other books. It will certainly depend upon your willing requirements. However, we constantly suggest that publications The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery can be an excellent infestation for your life.

Getting this book in this website could not lead you to walk and go to publication store. Looking for shelf by shelf will really invest your time primarily. However, it well not assurances you to be effective searching for The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story Of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery Therefore, you could discover it in the soft data of this publication. It will certainly give you the fantastic system of the book recommendation. You could go to the web link and go to the web page to make handle. As well as now, your book look documents of this can be your chosen publication and place to read this fascinating book.

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery

Product details

#detail-bullets .content {

margin: 0.5em 0px 0em 25px !important;

}

Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 6 hours and 50 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Listening Library

Audible.com Release Date: July 10, 2012

Whispersync for Voice: Ready

Language: English, English

ASIN: B008J9F4H8

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

This book was amazing! I thought I knew the story of Benedict Arnold. I did not! This well-researched, well-written book tells the dramatic life story of a man from a once-great family destroyed by an alcoholic father who struggled with tragedies in family and love and was determined to regain the family's name and status. He was also a great patriot -- brave, daring and cunning, risking his life many times for our country. It is this heroic Benedict Arnold that makes his betrayal of his country all the more shocking. (And it is so shocking!! We see how even people on the same side of a greater issue can clash bitterly over egos, money and fame.) This story is action-packed and full of famous people, too. It sheds light not only on Arnold but the American Revolution, which was not a sterile war of muskets and powdered wigs but a war of grit, blood and tremendous sacrifice for all people. It was a very dangerous time and the politics and politicians of that day will remind you much of today. A REALLY good book for students in middle school and up who want to know more about Benedict Arnold and about American history.

Not a long book - gives a great background of B.A. as a youth and early military as well as his later life. I had no knowledge of him really and I found this fascinating. He was mentioned in "Drums along the Mohawk" (book) and he stood out as a strong military man. I had always thought of him as a cowardly traitor. It piqued my interest and I found this book. I don't think he was right to betray his country but he was not treated fairly either. Congress has not changed much, eh?

This book was clearly written with the aim of rehabilitating, to some extent at least, the image and reputation of Benedict Arnold, a man whose name has been synonymous with treason for over 200 years. This is certainly a noble effort. Just as no hero is without his bad points and deeds, no villain is without his good ones. Understanding the whole person in the context of his historical, socio-economic and personal circumstances helps to flesh out the larger-than-life figures and make them human, and thereby helps to make history itself something human and, therefore, comprehensible.Sheinkin has succeeded admirably in humanizing Benedict Arnold, delving through mountains of historical documents and other evidence to piece together a portrait of Arnold as a man, rather than the caricature we read about in history books. At the same time, he has done so in a lively, engrossing way, sure to capture the hearts and minds of readers old and young, especially boys and especially those inclined to think history is "boring". Sheinkin's subtitle, "A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery" is no embellishment. You will probably find yourself flipping through the pages of this book as avidly as you would a well-written novel. But this is no novel - this falls clearly in the category of "you can't make this stuff up."As well researched and as well written as the book is, however, I have to fault Sheinkin at least a little for failing to fully and honestly see the portrait he has painted of Benedict Arnold. Sheinkin is clearly obsessed by, almost enamored with, the historical figure of Benedict Arnold (he admits as much in his Source Notes) and it's almost like he can't bear to face the worst about Arnold. It's not that he omits or whitewashes any data that would tarnish Arnold - indeed, Sheinkin's portrayal is unflinching. It's more that he doesn't want to fully see the conclusion that he himself has come to.Sheinkin views Arnold as a historical figure who has largely been wronged by history. His final act of treachery erased all the heroic acts that went before - acts which, Sheinkin argues, rescued the American Revolution from dying a premature death. History has also overlooked the jealousies, backbiting and political intrigues which smeared Arnold's reputation, paved the path for his betrayal, and provide Arnold's motivation and mindset for the same. But time after time it seems Sheinkin overlooks (or, rather, excuses) Arnold's own contributions to his predicaments - his pugnacious personality, his utter lack of patience, his brazenness, his lack of diplomacy and social skills, and his lack of ownership of the consequences of his own rash actions. These traits combined to enable Arnold to pull of the brash, heroic deeds he did, but they don't necessarily make him a man worthy of admiration.Arnold's determined, pugnacious personality probably developed early in life when he was pulled from school due to lack of money caused by his father's drinking, after which he spend a number of years hauling his father out of seedy taverns. We also know that Arnold was involved in a number of duels in his young life, suggesting that he was always impulsive and hot-headed. One of Arnold's first military victories involved the taking of Fort Ticonderoga, but his biggest adversary was actually a man who should have been an ally - Ethan Allen, leader of the Green Mountain Boys. Both had the same objective, but they were at loggerheads because Arnold insisted he had the only real authority (from the State of Massachusetts) to take the Fort, and he wasn't about to share power. (In all fairness, Ethan Allen probably also wasn't too keen on a joint command).The next several years of Arnold's life show a brazen string of military gambits (all at least partially successful, some wildly so), coupled with an inability to get along with fellow military leaders and superiors, as well as Congress. Arnold took huge gambles, risked - and lost - a lot of men, and earned some decisive battles, including ones big enough to convince France to risk fortune and forces on this unlikeliest of ventures. But because of his uncanny ability to alienate people, Arnold was rarely given adequate credit for his role. He was passed over and delayed for promotion several times, leaving him junior to officers with less military credit to their names. There were also rumors and accusations about him engaging in less than honorable behavior, such as the accusations that he stole provisions from Montreal (which Arnold insisted he was going to pay for).All of which make Arnold a sympathetic figure, and it's certainly understandable that he would get indignant and righteously angry. But Arnold developed a bitter, devil-may-care attitude and began acting in ways that gave truth to the lies and impugned his own character. After Arnold was wounded in battle, General Washington, in one of the most spectacular errors in judgment in history, made Arnold the military governor of Philadelphia, newly recovered from the British and full of loyalist and neutral families. This position should have required great tact - not one of Arnold's strengths. Arnold began living the high life, selecting for himself the best mansion and commandeering the best carriage. He lived far beyond the means of what his salary should have accommodated and he made some questionable merchandising deals. His attitude was that he was entitled to it all for the sacrifices he'd made on behalf of his country and the lack of recognitions he'd received therefor.It's soon after this point, while Arnold is just beginning to plot his betrayal, that Sheinkin seems to come to the central core of Arnold's character:"How could he be so self-righteous? After all, he had been guilty of devious dealings in Philadelphia. And he was at that moment plotting to betray his country! But therein lies the key to understanding Arnold: he didn't feel guilty. He was always able to convince himself that what he was doing was right."Now, I'm not qualified to diagnose Benedict Arnold across two hundred years of history, and certainly not based on one book. But in modern times, we have a word for people who don't feel guilt, people who always feel like they are the victim, people who feel entitled to take for themselves with no thought of others: sociopath.Of course, Sheinkin is an historian, not a psychologist, so I wouldn't expect him to use the specific word "sociopath". But it seems like, having laid out all the data, Sheinkin ignores the conclusion, which conclusion gels the two halves of Arnold's personality - hero and villain - into an understandable whole. Men who lack guilt can be brilliant, aggressive, even audacious leaders and, so long as they are "winning", they can accomplish amazing things. But they lack many qualities which inspire personal loyalty or genuine admiration, and when events turn against them, they will seek to fill the void in fame and riches wherever it is most opportune. Given this interpretation, Arnold's protestations about doing it all for the good of the people, to end the war, comes across as hollow and false. I think history has rightfully recognized Benedict Arnold as a self-serving traitor, not as a hero forced by circumstances and belief into acts which merely seem traitorous in the eye of the beholder.As a side note, Sheinkin opens the book with an execution scene. The reader may be forgiven for assuming the condemned man is Benedict Arnold, since Sheinkin doesn't tell us otherwise. It is only later that we realize it is Major John Andre, the British officer with whom Arnold plotted to expose and surrender West Point. I think it was a bit of a cheap ploy to open the book this way, given that Benedict Arnold himself died of gout, asthma and heart failure at the ripe old age of 60, having never been captured by the Americans.Nevertheless, I highly recommend this book. It is a stirring and engaging account of a historical figure whom practically everyone knows by name, but few know by deed.

This book is actually written for young adults BUT it answered the question that I have always had about one of the worst traitors in U.S. history. It may be bad Karma but I wanted to be sure that the man suffered after his betrayal of our fledgling country as it struggled for existence. I won't spoil the ending and tell what I found out BUT it was just amazing how different the outcomes in history might have been if certain people had not done what they did. It's very entertaining, although a tad lightweight for a heavy duty reader of Our History.

Excellent insight into the actions of a man who started out as a loyal American, a patriot, a superior leader and military strategist, but was turned to the dark side by arrogant and egomaniacal peers and military superiors. I do not condone his actions, nor would I ever become an apologist for treason, but I understand how working under supervisors of mediocre talent, ability and imagination can crush all of the "better angels" of our nature.

Sheinkin's ode to Benedict Arnold was awesome! I found myself thoroughly immmersed in the world of the American Revolution, Benedict Arnold and his perplexing personality (hard worker, soldier, but also rude and self-absorbed) and the life and times of this important period in our history. The way Arnold's life unfolds will definitely interest students, teachers and reluctant readers. The author has a flair for the dramatic in painting Benedict Arnold as a young man driven to succeed, where his father failed. Arnold has passion and boldness where his soldiers and combat are concerned and he exposes himself to danger often and without thought about how he will fare. This may be a wonderful attribute but we see throughout the war, this attitude garnered Arnold enemies and those enemies plotted time and again against him. Sheinkin;s research was very thorough and he provides many primary sources and secondary sources in order to present the enigma that was Benedict Arnold. I look forward to doing more reading and research on Arnold, George Washington, and other notables during the American Revolution.

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery PDF
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery EPub
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery Doc
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery iBooks
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery rtf
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery Mobipocket
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery Kindle

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery PDF

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery PDF

The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery PDF
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery PDF

Posting Komentar