Fred Kaplan (
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In this elegant study, Kaplan portrays our sixth president as a
deeply literary man, devout husband, orator, diplomat and teacher who
had grand plans for the country's future, including the building of
national infrastructure and the abolition of slavery. Indeed, John
Quincy Adams was concerned about America's loss of innocence
in its rapid expansion and growing distance from its foundational
ideals. A prodigious, gifted writer, he worried about "the internal
health of the nation," with the squabbling between the Republicans and
Federalists during the contested presidential elections, the addition of
slave states to the union and the War of 1812, which had revealed the
country's evolution into "a parcel of petty tribes at perpetual war with
one another." Like his father, Quincy Adams was Harvard-educated, a
lawyer and inculcated to answering the call of his country, despite his
own wishes. Kaplan ably navigates his subject's life, showing us "a president about
whom most Americans know very little." A lofty work that may propel
readers back to Quincy Adams' own ardent writings.--Kirkus