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J**N
History, as it happened
Nicolay and Hay were basically the White House Chief of Staff and Administrative Aid. Fortunately for those of us who are both history and political junkies it doesn't get any better than this. With Hay we have the nation's most unpopular president pursuing a most unpopular war (one that will claim more American casualties than any other), with a critical press and political opponents galore. There is political intrigue, dirty politics, and presidential personal tragedy. In Lincoln we have a president who imprisoned US citizens without trial and without habeas corpus, we have a president who captured foreign nationals (Confederates) from a British ship and imprisoned them in the US, a president who was soundly and rightfully criticized for suspending personal rights, a president who sent troops to arrest an entire state legislature. In Lincoln we have a president called stupid and a baboon.Hay's Diary takes us inside the White House in these most troubling of times. One sees close parallels to today. It is hard not to read Hay in the light of the current White House and presidential race. Only the names have changed, the issues are very much the same. I could not recommend a better source to obtain some perspective for the current political season.John Ellingson
B**L
Alas, you want Hay to give you more
John Hay's diary during the Lincoln presidency is a precious first person account of a giant in history and arguably America's greatest president. This edition includes all the marked out paragraphs and is an accessible read. The diary is not an in depth account of his time in the whitehouse, but it does provide some great anecdotes. The disappointment here is that you want more. More entries, more details and more anecdotes on "the tycoon." Regardless, as a a deep Lincoln admirer, you take what you can get when it comes to getting more of the Lincoln years.
A**N
Books condition
Received today, well packaged and in great condition. Thank you
D**Z
Disappointing
This book really centers on day-to-day minutiae without giving you all that much on Lincoln. So I ordered the Letters of Nicolay, as I think that book features more of what I am looking for. In this one there are great gaps in the writing where important battles should be--because Hay was too busy to write at those times. Bummer! The Nicolay memoirs I suspect will contain more personal impressions, too.
B**N
Great insight on Lincoln
John Hay is one of our history's overlooked heroes. Besides serving as Lincoln's secretary during the Civil Was , he went on to become Secretary of State under Presidents McKinley and Roosevelt. The diary highlights the close relationship between Lincoln and Hay and lays the groundwork for Hays future work.
D**T
Superb history with publishing issues
One reviewer found Hay's diary uninteresting, and that is hardly strange. Most diaries I've read are dull because they are most often jottings of information out of the head of an individual. I, too, would have liked more inside information out of John Hay, but he did not write it, so let's not downgrade the book because we didn't get what we would have liked. Burlingame's editing is top-notch, just what you would expect from a quality historian. My two gripes about the book were undoubtedly caused by the publisher's decision, which I recognize from first-hand experience: 1) Why endnotes instead of footnotes? If all the notes listed were sources, endnotes would be fine, but Burlingame's notes are critical and provide a lot of additional information. Constantly turning back to the endnotes breaks up the reading experience. 2) Burlingame maintained the crossed-out words in Hay's diary by using a strike-through font, which is fine except that the publisher used a strike-through so dark that it is hard to read the words underneath. Nonetheless, this is fine work, and I highly recommend it. If nothing else, you will gain knowledge of the enormous number of people with whom Abraham Lincoln had to deal every day.
D**S
difficult
My opinion of Hay's diary is very different then the other reviewer. I found it very hard to read, to understand, and to learn from. For a Lincoln scholar it might be useful, For me, a general history reader, I was very disappointed. The language was often bizzare, superficial, and very small. A great many names but no real people! Just names. Flat,flat,very flat. Hay died in Teddy Roosevelt's administration during the canal project as Sec. of State. He must have had a great deal on the ball to be so useful so long. I see nothing of it is his "Civil War Diary".
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