A People's History of the United States: 1492-Present (Perennial Classics)
M**H
A Purchase You'll Never Regret
For a realistic, surprisingly interesting history of the United States that's not mostly just a list of presidents and dates of wars, this is an excellent resource. Howard Zinn thinks far more about the causes and details of some of the most important aspects of our past than one usually sees. I just wish the history textbooks for my public school years had been written by this man. There would be many more history buffs in the world, and far more people who understand the cycles of history and their importance. Zinn includes peoples and issues that most histories never bother to acknowledge at all, regardless of their actual importance. I can't help wondering how different (and better understood) our current times would be if we had all been exposed to a more complete, thoughtful history of our country--like this one--from the time we entered school.
E**R
Should be required reading for ALL hi-school seniors
...and smart hi-school freshmen. Along with every literate American. This book by Zinn cuts out ALL the propaganda delivered by history books written by authors on the payroll of the victors. For instance, the first thing you'll learn here is that our so-called heroic discoverer, Christopher Columbus, was an immoral subhuman psychopath who just happened to know how to sort-of navigate a ship (tho he was only off by 10,000 miles) who by any standards of decency should have been run thru with a spear the instant he set foot on land. Then Cortes and Pizarro, likewise men with no conscience, did the same thing under the authority of the King of Spain AND the Pope, who answered a priest's inquiry about the morality of what they were doing (planned massacres of the natives using trickery and metal weapons) that such behavior "had been approved by the highest authorities". Not only were these mass murders carried out in the name of God and King, the perpetrators were proud of their deeds and bragged about their evil work in open letters which have been preserved as objects of pride. You will cry and rage in the same paragraph. The meanness and stupidity and avarice continues by way of stories of the people of the new land, a testament only to greater men and women who overcame such horrible beginnings (Pilgrims? Good folks? Read this book and be appalled.)I'm 72 yrs old - and have just realized that I (we all) should have read this book the year it was published, that we be not so self-righteous about our origins, as well as more alert to the damages done by greed-driven sociopaths in high places.
S**T
What they didn't teach you in high school history class
Great story of the groups in the US that did not win. The women, immigrants, black people, mine workers, strikers, etc. As I read it I thought "did this really happen this way?" and then I got up to the 60's where I had expercience the history first hand and saw that what Zinn was saying was true for that period and must be for the previous 200 years. A real eye-opener. Should be required reading in HS.
L**Z
Simply put, as a history buff, by far the best book I have ever read.
Best book I"ve ever read.My most recent order is a hard copy for my Mom, who's sharp as a whip and hip, though in an assisted living hom.Bought the expensive hard copy for her hoping it will have larger print.Howard Zinn tells the history of American from the view of the people, not the leaders, so it's far more accurate.Slavery from the viewpoint of the slaves.Native Americans from their view point.American wars from the viewpoint of the solders.The New England textile mills from the viewpoint of the workers.Mining towns from the viewpoint of the minors.The Japanese interned from the viewpoing of the Japanese.Should be required reading companion for all students. Alas, not in the days of indoctrination.
D**N
An Excellent Perspective for Understanding the Complete Past
There are those who have called Howard Zinn "unpatriotic" and who have denounced his book as left-wing propaganda. Nothing could be further from the truth. I would like to ask these individuals how they define patriotism. If one defines a patriot as a blind bigot who is ready to march to the ends of the earth for their country without looking where he or she is going, perhaps then Zinn is not a patriot. This book pulls plenty of punches at our country's past. However, these are not exactly cheap punches. Zinn has certainly done his homework. The information in this book is out there for any historian to find. Zinn's cardinal sin, for those on the conservative side of the aisle, is apparently that he collected these incidents together in a single volume.But if one defines a patriot as someone who believes in attempting to change our country for the better, through the power of a complete history, then Zinn satisfies in spades. Why has Zinn collected these stories and told the history of the United States from the minority perspective? Quite simply, the majority perspective has been taught to us from the first grade. Moreover, he tells us in the opening chapter:"If history is to be creative, to anticipate a possible future without denying the past, it should, I believe, emphasize new possibilities by disclosing those hidden episodes of the past when, even if in brief flashes, people showed their ability to resist, to join together, occasionally to win. I am supposing, or perhaps only hoping, that our future may be found in the past's fugitive moments of compassion rather than in its solid centuries of warfare" (11).There are a couple of important things to point out about Zinn's intentions. First, he believes that a history, in order to provide the present with meaningful content with which to construct a better future, must be a complete history, one that does not hide from its weak moments. Secondly, by telling these forgotten stories, say the full story of Christopher Columbus's journey into the Americas, you will force American citizens to take a second look at the issues and problems of the past, realize their relevancy to the present, and provide the intellectual fodder for us to improve upon our imperfect past.I know it sounds like I am crafting a high ideal for this book, but I think the ideal is true to Zinn's intentions. Read this book if you would like to explore American history from an angle that is frequently passed over in standard history books and courses. Any student of history will realize that all of these angles--be they liberal, conservative, etc.--are just that--merely angles or perspectives. But the "truth" cannot be found in any single one of these perspectives. Rather, by taking in the totality of perspectives, one comes to understand history and find meaning in the totality of our experience.
A**A
A History Book Read For Fun
This is the only American history book worth reading. It is honest, thorough, and sequential, beginning with Columbus' landing. Zinn, not only has correct information, but writes in a very easy-to-read, straight-forward manner. I'll read it again one day. This is a history book that can be read for fun!
M**R
Good
Easy to read and interesting.
M**H
Great package! Great Book!
Was sent very fast and packed safely so no damages to book. The book itself is a heavy read but worth it if you want to get some good facts.
P**.
Excellent, différent
J'avoue, je n'ai pas tout lu, mais ce livre apporte un regard qu'il est bon de connaître quand on veut avoir une vision d'ensemble des Etats-Unis et de leur histoire. Ce livre est même cité dans Will Hunting. Il s'agit de "progressive history", l'histoire plutôt vue du côté des perdants, autant que possible.
F**N
Ras
Ras
E**N
Marx would have loved it
Zinn's book would have been a perfect read for students in communistic countries. Maybe the author was dreaming of seeing his portrait next to Marx and Lenin on the red flag. Too bad the book was published only in 1999, many years after the idea of socialism/communism and the theory of class struggle had been proven deadly wrong and not compatible with human nature. Good for Zinn, he lived in a country where he was not only allowed to publish his ideas but even to sell books. Amazing. In a socialist society, which he is obviously dreaming of on every page, such a critic of the system could have never done like that without facing severe consequences and probably spending the rest of his life in a labour camp.The book, with the convenient benefit of hindsight, is pretty much a stringing together of all the big. small and minor events in American history, often taken out of their context, that Zinn desperately tries to connect to 'class struggle' and the 'big business suppresses the people' - sort of idea. It is just miserable and bad. The world is different. Fortunately.
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