American LionAndrew Jackson in the White House

Jon Meacham

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Summary

American Lion

By: Jon Meacham

Narrarated by: Richard McGonagle

Andrew Jackson, his intimate circle of friends, and his tumultuous times are at the heart of this remarkable book about the man who rose from nothing to create the modern presidency. Beloved and hated, venerated and reviled, Andrew Jackson was an orphan who fought his way to the pinnacle of power, bending the nation to his will in the cause of democracy. Jackson’s election in 1828 ushered in a new and lasting era in which the people, not distant elites, were the guiding force in American politics. Democracy made its stand in the Jackson years, and he gave voice to the hopes and the fears of a restless, changing nation facing challenging times at home and threats abroad. To tell the saga of Jackson’s presidency, acclaimed author Jon Meacham goes inside the Jackson White House. Drawing on newly discovered family letters and papers, he details the human drama-the family, the women, and the inner circle of advisers-that shaped Jackson’s private world through years of storm and victory.

One of our most significant yet dimly recalled presidents, Jackson was a battle-hardened warrior, the founder of the Democratic Party, and the architect of the presidency as we know it. His story is one of violence, sex, courage, and tragedy. With his powerful persona, his evident bravery, and his mystical connection to the people, Jackson moved the White House from the periphery of government to the center of national action, articulating a vision of change that challenged entrenched interests to heed the popular will-or face his formidable wrath. The greatest of the presidents who have followed Jackson in the White House-from Lincoln to Theodore Roosevelt to FDR to Truman-have found inspiration in his example, and virtue in his vision.

Jackson was the most contradictory of men. The architect of the removal of Indians from their native lands, he was warmly sentimental and risked everything to give more power to ordinary citizens. He was, in short, a lot like his country: alternately kind and vicious, brilliant and blind; and a man who fought a lifelong war to keep the republic safe-no matter what it took.

Jon Meacham in American Lion has delivered the definitive human portrait of a pivotal president who forever changed the American presidency-and America itself.

Sample Audiobook
Audiobook Information
New York Times Best Seller
  • Edition: Unabridged
  • Author: Jon Meacham (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Nov 11, 2008
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Genre: United States History, Political Biography, Biography & Memoir, Historical Biography

Total File Size: 474 MB (14 files) Total Length: 17 Hours, 15 Minutes

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Alfred Soto

eMusic Contributor

11.11.08
Jon Meacham, American Lion
2008 | Label: Random House Audio

Occupying a wary place in the lineage of great presidents, Andrew Jackson is a mystery to most Americans, who mostly associate him with either a nickname ("Old Hickory") or the face on an ATM machine's most frequently requested bill. By juxtaposing examples of the seventh president's unspeakable cruelties with his moments of surpassing tenderness, Jon Meacham's American Lion creates a man so vivid that he renders his successors wan by comparison. Meacham breathlessly notes Jackson's various political battles, but he devotes more time to dissecting the conflict for which Jackson was most reviled by the intelligentsia during his eight-year term: his defense of Secretary of War John Henry Eaton's marriage to Margaret Timberlake, who was dismissed as an adulteress by the Washington hostess set. These battles between the DC status quo and Old Hickory, Meacham writes, helped Jackson retain his almost mystical sway over the American body politic.

After a nearly unbroken line of Virginian intellectuals in Washington, the half-educated general felt real to his supporters (helped in no small part by canny publicity agents who predated today's masters of spin), even as tongue wagging in elite DC circles cost him political capital when he needed it most. But to have behaved otherwise, Meacham argues, would have shattered Jackson's pathological obsession with his sense of honor and duty. And that was Jackson: the plebeian for whom The People was a misty-eyed abstraction, yet also the Tennessee planter forever in search of the next duel. The president who genuinely saw himself as a father to Native Americans even as he forcibly ordered their exile in present-day Oklahoma.

Jackson's irascibility and confident use of executive authority might suffice to elevate his present profile, but Meacham prefers to cast Jackson in a respectable light, as if needing to reassure us that he wasn't such a Bad Man after all. “Jackson could, of course lapse into alarming violence," Meacham writes, patting the reader's hand, "but he also had a capacity for political grace and conciliation when the spirit moved him." An epitaph whose granitic solemnity Old Hickory would have endorsed.

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