William Cooper's Town
Power and Persuasion on the Frontier of the Early American Republic (Pulitzer Prize Winner)
Alan Taylor
Ebook
Award Winner
November 28, 2018 | ISBN 9780525566991
AmazonApple BooksBarnes & NobleBooks A MillionGoogle Play StoreKobo
Paperback
Award Winner
August 27, 1996 | ISBN 9780679773009
AmazonBarnes & NobleBooks A MillionBookshop.orgHudson BooksellersPowell'sTargetWalmart
About the Book
William Cooper rose from humble origins to become a wealthy land speculator and U.S. congressman in what had until lately been the wilderness of upstate New York, but his high-handed style of governing resulted in his fall from power and political disgrace. His son James Fenimore Cooper became one of this country’s first popular novelists with a book, The Pioneers, that tried to come to terms with his father’s failure and imaginatively reclaim the estate he had lost.
In William Cooper’s Town, Alan Taylor dramatizes the class between gentility and democracy that was one of the principal consequences of the American Revolution, a struggle that was waged both at the polls and on the pages of our national literature. Taylor shows how Americans resolved their revolution through the creation of new social reforms and new stories that evolved with the expansion of our frontier.