Description
Fine. 1st Edition – Signed by Author who added a hand drawn smiley face on title page. First Printing of this lively biography of one of the most wretched figures in American public life in the 19th century. 397 pages.
FINE ~ WITH NO SIGN OF PREVIOUS USE. In as new condition, with as new dust cover which has been professionally wrapped in plastic which has prevented any wear. Absolutely no sign of previous use.
Preface
Hero, adulterer, bon vivant, murderer and rogue, Dan Sickles led the kind of existence that was indeed stranger than fiction. Throughout his life he exhibited the kind of exuberant charm and lack of scruple that wins friends, seduces women, and gets people killed. In American Scoundrel Thomas Keneally, the acclaimed author of Schindler’s List, creates a biography that is as lively and engrossing as its subject.
Dan Sickles was a member of Congress, led a controversial charge at Gettysburg, and had an affair with the deposed Queen of Spain—among many other women. But the most startling of his many exploits was his murder of Philip Barton Key (son of Francis Scott Key), the lover of his long-suffering and neglected wife, Teresa. The affair, the crime, and the trial contained all the ingredients of melodrama needed to ensure that it was the scandal of the age. At the trial’s end, Sickles was acquitted and hardly chastened. His life, in which outrage and accomplishment had equal force, is a compelling American tale, told with the skill of a master narrative.
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/91468/american-scoundrel-by-thomas-keneally/
About the Author
Thomas Keneally, (born 7 October 1935, Sydney, Australia) is an Australian writer best known for his historical novels. Keneally’s characters are gripped by their historical and personal past, and decent individuals are portrayed at odds with systems of authority.
At age 17, Keneally entered a Roman Catholic seminary, but he left before ordination; the experience influenced his early fiction, including ‘The Place at Whitton’ (1964) and ‘Three Cheers for the Paraclete’ (1968). His reputation as an historical novelist was established with ‘Bring Larks and Heroes’ (1967), about Australia’s early years as an English penal colony. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith’ (1972; film 1980) won Keneally international acclaim; it is based on the actual story of a half-caste Aboriginal who rebels against white racism by going on a murder spree. ‘The Great Shame’ (1998), a work inspired by his own ancestry, details 80 years of Irish history from the perspective of Irish convicts sent to Australia in the 19th century.
Although Australia figures prominently in much of Keneally’s work, his range was broad. His well-received ‘Gossip from the Forest’ (1975) examines the World War I armistice through the eyes of a thoughtful, humane German negotiator. He was also praised for his treatment of the American Civil War in ‘Confederates’ (1979). His later novels included ‘A Family Madness’ (1985), ‘To Asmara’ (1989), ‘Flying Hero Class’ (1991), ‘Woman of the Inner Sea’ (1992), ‘Jacko’ (1993), ‘Homebush Boy’ (1995), ‘Bettany’s Book’ (2000), ‘The Tyrant’s Novel’ (2003), ‘The Widow and Her Hero’ (2007), ‘The Daughters of Mars’ (2012), and ‘Crimes of the Father’ (2017). ‘The Dickens Boy (2020) is a fictionalised account of English novelist Charles Dickens’s youngest son, who emigrated to Australia whilst a teenager.
Keneally’s best-known work, ‘Schindler’s Ark’ (1982; also published as ‘Schindler’s List’; film 1993), tells the true story of Oskar Schindler, a German industrialist who saved more than 1,300 Jews from the Nazis. Like many of Keneally’s protagonists, Schindler is a rather ordinary man who acts in accord with his conscience, despite the evil around him. Controversy surrounded the book’s receipt of the Booker Prize for fiction; detractors argued that the work was mere historical reporting.
With his daughter, Meg Keneally, he also wrote a historical crime series. The first instalment, ‘The Soldier’s Curse’, was published in 2016. Other books in ‘The Monsarrat Series’, as it was known, included ‘The Power Game’ (2018) and ‘The Ink Stain’ (2019).
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Thomas-Keneally
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