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Book Review
| Seizing Destiny: How America Grew from Sea to Shining Sea. By Richard Kluger. (New York: Knopf, 2007. xviii, 649 pp. $35.00, ISBN 978-0-375-41341-4.)
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| Richard Kluger's Seizing Destiny is an exploration of how the United States acquired the lands that now constitute the fifty states and the U.S. territories. The book is engagingly written and based almost entirely on research in secondary sources. If anyone still taught courses on U.S. diplomatic history before the Cold War, Kluger's work would be an excellent text for the instructor to use as a straw man for an in-depth elucidation of early U.S. foreign policy. |
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For the most part, Kluger takes a heroes-and-villains approach, with the black hats and white hats often appearing on opposite sides of the same coin. Still, the coverage of major diplomatic developments is thoughtful and generally accurate. As one might expect, there is considerable adulation of Benjamin Franklin's performance as U.S. representative in France during the Revolutionary War. John Jay receives his due for helping shift U.S. interests away from those of France during the peace negotiations. Kluger also carefully explains why Jay's attempt to negotiate a treaty with Spain in the 1780s—one that would have kept the lower Mississippi River closed to U.S. navigation for a generation—was such an affront to the southern states. |
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