Ben Waber reviewed The republic for which it stands by White, Richard (The Oxford history of the United States)
A Sprawling, Fascinating History
5 stars
This is a nearly all-encompassing history of arguably the most important period of domestic US history, and one that bears many similarities to our current moment. The different chapters, and especially the conclusion, are also extremely insightful, detailing the connections between the failure of reconstruction, the railroad frenzy, eugenics, trusts, labor power, and US/Indian relations. The only problem is that there's no coherent thesis or framing, leaving the different sections to feel disjointed. Covering so much ground also leaves depth wanting, despite this book's length, but the incredible bibliography provides an excellent jumping off point. Highly recommend.
This is a nearly all-encompassing history of arguably the most important period of domestic US history, and one that bears many similarities to our current moment. The different chapters, and especially the conclusion, are also extremely insightful, detailing the connections between the failure of reconstruction, the railroad frenzy, eugenics, trusts, labor power, and US/Indian relations. The only problem is that there's no coherent thesis or framing, leaving the different sections to feel disjointed. Covering so much ground also leaves depth wanting, despite this book's length, but the incredible bibliography provides an excellent jumping off point. Highly recommend.