David McCullough has written a brilliant chronicling of Americans who traveled to
In the 1830’s
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Samuel Morse and John Fennimore Cooper kicked off the
migration. Call me ignorant, but I didn’t
know that Morse was an artist. He spent
countless hours in the Louvre painting and receiving commissions stateside for
his work. Cooper wrote many of his most
important novels there. Holmes and many
other American medical students studied medicine.
The invention that
Morse is most famous for, the telegraph and the code named after him, was
conceived in Paris . Later, P.T. Barnum and his famous Tom Thumb
toured the city to great acclaim. The
pianist and composer Gottschalk spent many years performing in Paris .
Other artists
that came were John Singer Sargent, James McNeil Whistler and Augustus
Saint-Gaudens. Mary Cassatt, who became
good friends with Edgar Degas, was the only American accepted into the Impressionist
fold.
In addition to
the artists, architects, and musicians, important politicians left their
mark. Elihu Washburne was the only
international diplomat who stayed in Paris
during the political upheaval and wars during the 1870’s. He helped protect and provide for many native
and foreign people caught in the crossfire.
We don’t just
learn of the Americans’ accomplishments but of their lives: how they spent their free time, the sort of
friendships they made, their characters and personalities.
McCullough does a
meticulous job gathering notes, letters, and diaries. His bibliography takes up almost a quarter of
the book. His writing is fluid and
eloquent. This is no dry recitation of
facts but a vibrant, breathing, compilation of the different lives and events
that shaped Paris and the Americans that lived there. Reading The Greater Journey paints a vivid
picture as rich and voluptuous as an oil painting by Cezanne. One can see and experience a Paris of the past. The only way anyone will be able to do so
now.
For anyone
interested in history and how one culture is shaped by another, this book is
highly recommended.
Further links:
Cleopatra: A Life
Further links:
Cleopatra: A Life
Or buy on Kindle for $9.99
6 comments:
This looks to be a great book!
I also never knew that Morse was an artist. We hear so much abbot Americans migrating to France post WW I, but I never know that artists also traveled there so much in the 19th century.
I have read a couple of books by McCullough. Though I found 1776 to be a little disapointing due to lack of detail, I thought that "John Adams" was outstanding.
I just saw this book last night on 60 Minutes, glad to hear it lives up to the expectations.
http://www.ManOfLaBook.com
A friend of mine told me I need to read McCullough's John Adams. One more book for the TBR pile.
I don't have cable so I'll have to find the episode on youtube.
I have the audio version of this book and have been putting it off because there are so many discs. I saw the 60 Minutes Show too and now eager to listen to in 2013.
Carol: It is a longish book. I suppose if you had a long commute to work or were to go on a road trip you could bring them along and listen:)Whatever you decide to do you will find it worth your while. Have a good day!
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