top of page
Close
 

Log In

Email or User Name:
Password:

Forgot your password?

Please register with Shopping.com.
Share your opinions and help others make informed buying decisions.Close
Email Address:
User Name:(4-14 characters.)
Password:(At least 7 characters, different than username.)
Verify password:
Verification code:

By clicking on the button below, you agree to the Shopping.com User Agreement and Privacy Policy.


Sign me up to receive Shopping.com's great deals and promotions.

Thank You  for registering at Shopping.comClose
The confirmation message has been resent to your inbox.
 
Please check your email account below to activate your membership:


No email yet?
Forgot PasswordClose
Your temporary password has been resent to your inbox.
 
A temporary password has been sent to your email. Once you sign in, please visit your member profile page to change your password.

No email yet?

Please enter the email address you used to register your account. If you can't remember your email, please contact customer service at support@shopping.com.
Email Address:
Clicking on "Submit" will reset your password. A temporary password will be sent to the email you enter above.
 

Joseph J. Ellis - Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation

from $4.64 8 offers
Joseph J. Ellis - Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation
 
 
 
 
 
Smart Buy! Lowest price from a Trusted Store
Amazon
 
Lowest Price!
HotBookSale
$4.64
Free Shipping!
 
Featured Offer
HotBookSale
$4.64
Free Shipping!
 

User Review

Read All Reviews »

17 out of 17 people found this review helpful.

A 15 year-old's view on a history book

Date of Review: Jul 26, 2003

The Bottom Line:  Overall, this book was very well written and I believe that people from ages 14 and up will like it and even find it to be rather enjoyable.
Last year, in 9th grade pre-IB American History, my teacher required his class to read this book. At first, we were all upset because we had just switched from pre-IB English with Romeo & Juliet, Odyssey, October Sky, and Hamlet. But, we soon found out that the book wasn't half as bad as Hamlet or Odyssey.

Ellis wrote in a way that would confuse anybody. In the first chapter one of the founding brothers is dead (Adams, I believe) but then in the second chapter he's eating dinner with the other three brothers. (C'mon, Ellis, couldn't you have at least used chronological order? You're slacking on us!)

The thing that my class, for the most part, really liked what that the author gave details of the men's personal lives; the book wasn't just straight facts. (Ask any 15 year old, facts are boring - we want the juicy details.) And Ellis seems to have a slight sense of humor that wants to come out because I noticed in several parts that he tried to make jokes about the med...or it could just be that I'm too young to really understand.)

The worst part about the book, for a high school student, somethings were hard to understand. Ellis used "old-time" phrases that confused me and he used very scholarly words - most of which I had to look up on m-w.com and then look up the meaning of the second word.

-Lillie
  4.0

by: i3aby
Recommended to buy: Yes

Pros
quite funny, tells about person lives
Cons
confusing at some points, often repeats information
Was this review helpful?       |   
Please let us know what kind of issue this is:
Profanity
Wrong product *
Spam
Duplicate *
Copyright violation *
Not a product review
Other

Comments:
(required for issues marked with a *)

 Max. 1000 characters

 
Switch to: Overview | Reviews | Compare Prices
 
 
advertisement
 
 

Copyright © 2000-2009 Shopping.com