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Americas Canada Classics History Literature & Fiction Political Science Politics & Social SciencesParkman's writing is comprehensive, intelligent, and almost overwhelming at times. The topics are so broad that it sometimes takes me a while to wrap my head around what, exactly, the author is saying, but that challenge is usually a lot of fun!
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I have sought to expand my understanding of American history . No better author than Parkman for the early centuries . He spent years among many of the tribes he writes about , extensively read the writings of the earliest French explorers and settlers involved . Parkman's still stands as the most in depth and at the same time , most exciting histories of the North American peoples. He obviously respects the Native Americans...
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I am thrilled with my copy of Francis Parkman's history! Came neatly packaged and arrived promptly. No complaints at all!
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How the French colonized Canada, converted the Indians to Christianity, and continually harrassed the English colonists and the English Crown until they finally provoked them into open warfare. In the end, they lost the war and Canada. Parkman gives us quite a detailed account of events leading up to and of the final conflict, but it's not always easy reading. It is, however, fascinating enough to slug your way through...
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Francis Parkman is one of those titans of history writing, with a stature equal to that of Gibbon, Carlyle, Prescott, Herodotus, Thucydides and Churchill. His tales of the first colonial wars thus assume a mythological status, and the main protagonists of this, the second part of the Library of America volume - Frontenac, Montcalm and Wolfe - are all larger than life. The story of Count Frontenac is set against the era...
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