Sunday, January 20, 2019

Book Review: RUSH

RUSH by Stephen Fried

Revolution, Madness, and Benjamin Rush, the Visionary Doctor Who Became a Founding Father


Benjamin Rush - physician, educator, pamphleteer, occasional federal appointee and signer of the Declaration of Independence - is an unsung Founding Father. He led a remarkable life somewhat on the edges of the Revolution and first years of the Republic. His influence, however, went well beyond what anyone familiar with that history might know.

Author Stephen Fried presents a detailed, nuanced and fascinating portrait the competing strands of Rush’s life Dedicated doctor and accomplished scientist, his naïveté and pride often derailed his accomplishments. A thoughtful and ardent revolutionary, he damaged his relationships with Washington and others with intemperate outbursts. Through his dedication to the ill - most notably during a horrific yellow fever outbreak in Philadelphia - he put himself and his family’s future at risk. 

With access to previously unpublished research, Fried shows how Rush’s actions around the edges of history helped shape the early days of the United States and the lives of the most well-known Founding Fathers. The book not only tells Rush’s worthy story, it adds to understanding of the major actions, decisions and foibles that led up to and immediately followed the founding of the United States. 

Rush also founded Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA - my younger son William graduated from there in 2015v with a classics degree.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Book review: Erebus, by Michael Palin


Front Cover


Michael Palin - best known to most from Monty Python and his televised trips around the world, from pole to pole, etc. - was also president of the Royal Geographical Society. All of this experience comes into play in ‘Erebus,’ a very detailed and delightfully engaging history of the Royal Navy ship Erebus, whose mid-19th-century voyage of exploration to the Antarctic was one of the most successful of the century, followed closely by a tragically unsuccessful attempt to penetrate the Arctic.

Even though Palin dispenses with his Monty Python heritage with one memorable paragraph, his humor suffuses the book - his descriptions of the ships, their crews, their voyages and many letters home have a light but deft touch, giving the reader a clear-eyed but not maudlin of the  challenges and difficulties of years-long voyages in the age of sail.

The book starts with the construction and outfitting of Erebus and her sister ship Terror, both so-called ‘bomb ships,’ tough, small craft designed as floating artillery platforms. Palin’s painstaking research covers every phase of Erebus’ construction, fitting out and early career - a wealth of detail for those with interest. Once the mission to the Antarctic is set, he turns the same eye for detail and story to the selection of the crew, introducing us to several officers and seamen who remain important characters - along with the ship - throughout the book.

His story of the Antarctic voyage covers science, Victorian English manners, adventure, privations difficult but not fatal, the politics of the Royal Navy and the scientific establishment, and a seemingly endless list of animals discovered, captured, preserved and consumed. The result is a highly readable, fascinating and unique vignette.

Throughout the book, Palin makes modern-day visits to places where the ships traveled - the Falklands, the Antarctic Ocean and more. The descriptions of these locales offer a contemporary connection to the voyage.


The description of the second, ill-fated voyage to the Arctic, is much less detailed since all records went down with the ship. Nevertheless, Palin succeeds in bringing it to life. It is less compelling than the first part of the book but well worth the read.

Published by Greystone Books, available at your local independent bookstore - try Warwick's of La Jolla.