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Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid That Sparked the Civil War Hardcover – October 25, 2011
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A New York Times Notable Book for 2011
A Library Journal Top Ten Best Books of 2011
A Boston Globe Best Nonfiction Book of 2011
Bestselling author Tony Horwitz tells the electrifying tale of the daring insurrection that put America on the path to bloody war
Plotted in secret, launched in the dark, John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry was a pivotal moment in U.S. history. But few Americans know the true story of the men and women who launched a desperate strike at the slaveholding South. Now, Midnight Rising portrays Brown's uprising in vivid color, revealing a country on the brink of explosive conflict.
Brown, the descendant of New England Puritans, saw slavery as a sin against America's founding principles. Unlike most abolitionists, he was willing to take up arms, and in 1859 he prepared for battle at a hideout in Maryland, joined by his teenage daughter, three of his sons, and a guerrilla band that included former slaves and a dashing spy. On October 17, the raiders seized Harpers Ferry, stunning the nation and prompting a counterattack led by Robert E. Lee. After Brown's capture, his defiant eloquence galvanized the North and appalled the South, which considered Brown a terrorist. The raid also helped elect Abraham Lincoln, who later began to fulfill Brown's dream with the Emancipation Proclamation, a measure he called "a John Brown raid, on a gigantic scale."
Tony Horwitz's riveting book travels antebellum America to deliver both a taut historical drama and a telling portrait of a nation divided―a time that still resonates in ours.
- Print length384 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHenry Holt and Co.
- Publication dateOctober 25, 2011
- Dimensions6.42 x 1.26 x 9.51 inches
- ISBN-10080509153X
- ISBN-13978-0805091533
- Lexile measure1200L
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A hard-driving narrative of one of America's most troubling figures… Horwitz describes the disaster in riveting terms… It's impossible to read this fine book without thinking about modern-day Browns.” ―Kevin Boyle, The New York Times Book Review (a New York Times Notable Book, 2011)
“Horwitz's skills are a good match for this enormously compelling character, and his well-paced narrative incorporates masterful sketches of Brown's family, foot soldiers, financial backers, admirers and prosecutors… The result is both page-turning and heartbreaking--a book to engage mind and soul.” ―The Boston Globe
“Horwitz, an exceptionally skilled and accomplished journalist, here turns his hand to pure history with admirable results. Midnight Rising is smoothly written, thoroughly researched, places Brown within the context of his time and place, and treats him sensitively but scarcely adoringly.” ―The Washington Post(Best of 2011, Notable Work of Nonfiction)
“Midnight Rising is a richly detailed and engaging history… Horwitz's moment-by-moment account of the doomed raid unfolds with such immediacy that he reintroduces suspense to a story we all know from textbooks.” ―The San Francisco Chronicle
“Horwitz describes guerrilla action and the run-up to war with a deadline writer's immediacy… A brilliant researcher, he integrates diverse sources into a cogent adventure.” ―The Washington Times
“What do you call John Brown? Is he a terrorist or a freedom fighter? ... Tony Horwitz settles upon the word insurgent -- and the label seems just right, as does Horwitz's book as a whole…” ―Seattle Times
“In captivating detail, Horwitz animates the wild-eyed, long-bearded crusader . . . Make no mistake, the infamous October 1859 raid on the federal armory at Harpers Ferry by John Brown and his 18 men was the stone that began the avalanche that became the Civil Wars.” ―The Cleveland Plain Dealer
“A brave and highly successful attempt to revive the legend of Brown's martyrdom for the 21st century reader…. Horwitz's vivid writing style… makes for a superb historical narrative.” ―Buffalo News
“A beautifully crafted, richly detailed, and riveting narrative of a pivotal episode in American history . . . Midnight Rising is at its best reconstructing the lives (and deaths) of the relatively anonymous conspirators – especially the African-Americans.” ―The Florida Courier
“Horwitz's potent prose delivers the facts of this bellwether incident in riveting fashion… It is an absorbing portrait of the often frustrated but passionately driven firebrand who successfully convinced a country of the shame of slavery and, to the South's great regret, earned martyr status in the aftermath of his execution. Brown qualifies as America's first important post-revolution terrorist...” ―Bookpage
“Horwitz's description of the little band of idealists and adventurers who signed on for Brown's offensive – including five black men and two of Brown's own sons – is both fascinating and touching. His careful recreation of the bloody events of October 16, 1859, the day of Brown's disastrous raid on Harpers Ferry, is both suspenseful and heartwrenching.” ―Christian Science Monitor (one of the 15 Best Nonfiction Books of 2011)
“In Midnight Rising, [Horwitz] not only gives us an action-packed adventure story, but also provides detailed historical background and vivid character portraits of the principals involved… Assiduously researched using archival sources, Horwitz's riveting tale is on sound factual footing. And he does a wonderful job of bringing to life the fascinating, messianic leader who, on the way to the gallows, would incite a nation toward civil war.” ―St. Petersburg Times
“Compelling reading.” ―Wichita Eagle
“The lively narrative focuses on the 1859 attack on an armory in Harpers Ferry, W.Va, by Brown and his ragtag followers -- the event credited with lighting the fuse on the deadliest conflict in U.S. history.” ―San Jose Mercury News
“A groundbreaking study of the Harper's Ferry raid that makes a number of fascinating points: Brown was not a madman or a fanatic, he knew his death would serve as a moral lightning rod, and the fallout from his actions has echoed for generations.” ―Oregonian
“Superb and amply researched… [Horwitz] renders with empathy and insight the lives of the individuals Brown touched, whether they were family members, victims, or the idealistic raiders who followed him to Harpers Ferry… Brown's raiders thus appear more human, poignant, and fallible and the whole venture more noble, futile, benighted, heroic, and sadder than heretofore.” ―American Scholar
“Gripping, disturbing and heartbreaking... Horwitz brings all his gifts of character building and storytelling to Brown's rise and self-promotion… Horwitz's Brown did not die in vain. By recalling the drama that fired the imagination and fears of Brown's time, Midnight Rising calls readers to account for complacency about social injustices today.” ―Library Journal (a Top Ten Book of the Year, 2011)
“Lucid and compelling… The author's archival sleuthing pays off with a rich narrative.” ―Kirkus Reviews
“[Horwitz's] vivid biographical portrait of Brown gives us an American original: a failed businessman and harsh Calvinist with a soft spot for the oppressed and a murderous animus against oppressors… Brown's raiders--a motley crew of his sons and various idealists, adventurers, freedmen, and fugitive slaves--come alive as a romantic, appealing bunch; their agonizing deaths give Horwitz's excellent narrative of the raid and shootout a deep pathos.” ―Publishers Weekly
“There's a brilliance to this book that put me in mind of Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, only Horwitz's Midnight Rising is set deeper in America's dark past. With stunning, vivid detail, he has captured the sheer drama and tragedy of John Brown and that bloody raid at Harpers Ferry that helped propel America toward civil war.” ―Erik Larson, author of The Devil in the White City and In the Garden of Beasts
“Tony Horwitz's gifts as a vivid narrator of dramatic events are on full display in this story of John Brown's wars in Kansas and his climactic Harpers Ferry raid in 1859. Brown's family and the men who joined him in these fights against slavery receive a more fully rounded treatment than in any other account. Of special note is the discussion of Brown's self-conscious emulation of Samson by pulling down the temple of bondage and dying a martyr in its ruins.” ―James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom
“Midnight Rising is a deeply compelling work, richly researched and elegantly written. The events surrounding the raid on Harpers Ferry--and the complex character of John Brown himself--come vividly to life in Tony Horwitz's irresistibly readable account.” ―Annette Gordon-Reed, author of The Hemingses of Monticello
“With his customary blend of rich archival research, on-location color, and lyrical prose, Tony Horwitz has delivered a John Brown book for our time. Part biography, part historical narrative, Midnight Rising is a riveting re-creation of the Harpers Ferry raid, told with an unblinking sense of Brown's tragic place in American history. Writing with enveloping detail and a storyteller's verve, Horwitz shows why Brown was--and still is--so troubling and important to our culture.” ―David W. Blight, author of American Oracle: The Civil War in the Civil Rights Era
“Tony Horwitz knows how to tell a story, and here his considerable gifts as a writer bring John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry alive in a style that is just as electric as its subject.” ―Joseph J. Ellis, author of Founding Brothers and First Family
“Beautifully written and sparkling with fresh insights, Midnight Rising resurrects the multiple faces of John Brown: avenging angel or murderous terrorist; slavery's nemesis or deluded fanatic; abolitionist hero or subversive insurrectionist. In this thrilling, magnificent and essential book, Tony Horwitz shows how one man and a single event set the nation on a doomed course where the crimes of a guilty land could only be purged by blood.” ―James L. Swanson, author of Manhunt and Bloody Crimes
About the Author
Tony Horwitz is a native of Washington, D.C., and a graduate of Brown University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. He worked for many years as a reporter, first in Indiana and then during a decade overseas in Australia, Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, mostly covering wars and conflicts as a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. After returning to the States, he won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting and worked as a staff writer for The New Yorker before becoming a full-time author.
His books include Midnight Rising, A Voyage Long and Strange, Blue Latitudes, a national and New York Times bestseller about the Pacific voyages of Captain James Cook, Baghdad Without a Map, a national bestseller about the Middle East, and Confederates in the Attic, a national and New York Times bestseller about the Civil War.
Horwitz has been a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and a visiting scholar at the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University. He lives with his wife, Geraldine Brooks, and their son, Nathaniel, on the island of Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts.
Product details
- Publisher : Henry Holt and Co.; First Edition (October 25, 2011)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 080509153X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0805091533
- Lexile measure : 1200L
- Item Weight : 1.45 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.42 x 1.26 x 9.51 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #851,518 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #220 in U.S. Abolition of Slavery History
- #1,449 in Black & African American History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Tony is a native of Washington, D.C., and a graduate of Brown University and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. He spent a decade overseas as a foreign correspondent, mainly covering wars and conflicts for The Wall Street Journal. After returning to the U.S., he won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting and wrote for The New Yorker before becoming a full-time author.
His books include the national and New York Times bestsellers, Confederates in the Attic, Blue Latitudes, Baghdad Without a Map and A Voyage Long and Strange. Midnight Rising, was named a New York Times Notable Book of 2011; one of the year’s ten best books by Library Journal; and won the 2012 William Henry Seward Award for Excellence in Civil War Biography. His latest, BOOM, is his first ebook, about a journey through the tar sands and along the route of the Keystone XL pipeline.
Tony has also been a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, and a visiting scholar at the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University. He lives with his wife, Geraldine Brooks, and their sons, Nathaniel and Bizu, on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book delivers the details of the event and reads like the best fiction novel, with carefully researched content that provides great insight into John Brown's life. They appreciate the pacing, with one customer noting Brown's unwavering courage in the face of death. The character development receives mixed reactions from customers.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers praise the book's storytelling, describing it as an exciting and mesmerizing narrative that delivers detailed accounts of historical events, making it a must-read for history enthusiasts.
"...Horwitz closely examines the historical facts, dissects them this way and that, and paints a painfully honest and detailed portrait of villain-hero..." Read more
"...Here the story takes on an epic quality with the description of the Brown family, his two marriages and his 20 children...." Read more
"...the story of the his life in a well researched and easily read, linear narrative, and thus leaves the reader to draw his own conclusions." Read more
"...He is a great writer and his narrative here is compelling enough to interest any reader, even those who are not history buffs...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as incredibly readable and saying it reads like the best fiction novel.
"...Through inspired and eloquent speeches, writings and conversations, Brown sought to propound his vision of a just and equal society without the..." Read more
"...hanged for treason is the subjects of this well crafted and well written book. The narrative is rich and the research impeccable...." Read more
"...I did not fully know this until I read this book. Well researched. Well written." Read more
"...Horwitz tells the story of the his life in a well researched and easily read, linear narrative, and thus leaves the reader to draw his own..." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and entertaining to read.
"...The Abolitionist movement supported this raid, financed it and helped get it completed. I did not fully know this until I read this book...." Read more
"This was a great read...." Read more
"...Very enjoyable read." Read more
"...It made the reading all the more real. You don't have to be a Civil War buff to enjoy this book." Read more
Customers praise the book's research quality, noting it is carefully researched and informative, with one customer highlighting its detailed facts.
"...While his business affairs careened up and down, Brown's passion, determination and independence brought him the attention - and financial support..." Read more
"...The narrative is rich and the research impeccable...." Read more
"...I did not fully know this until I read this book. Well researched. Well written." Read more
"...but rather Mr. Horwitz tells the story of the his life in a well researched and easily read, linear narrative, and thus leaves the reader to draw..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's insight into John Brown's life, providing a detailed look at his character and heroic persona.
"...I enjoyed the book it was a good historical story that gave me some insight into a character that I have heard of for many years and just did not..." Read more
"...I liked how it went into such specific detail about John Brown and the influence he had on the Civil War...." Read more
"This is an excellent book on abolitionist John Brown, his followers, and his northern financial backers on the attack at Harper's Ferry Arsenal...." Read more
"John Brown is among the most enigmatic figures in American History. Horwitz's dispassionate perspective avoids an agenda-driven view of Brown...." Read more
Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, with one describing it as riveting and another noting how the protagonist did not flinch at the prospect of death.
"...Brown comported himself with composed dignity and did not flinch at the prospect of death...." Read more
"...man ended up being hanged for treason is the subjects of this well crafted and well written book. The narrative is rich and the research impeccable...." Read more
"...The Abolitionist movement was strong, again, in this day and age where FB attempts to paint all Whites as racist slave owners...." Read more
"...Mr. Horwitz clearly demonstrates Brown's steadfast courage and the power of his words ultimately triumphed, and did more to forward his..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book, with one review praising the incredible interweaving of personalities involved, while another finds the main character grossly unsympathetic.
"...Inadequate men, lack of communication and poor coordination of supplies hampered efforts from the beginning...." Read more
"...wounded in the assault by the US military, comported himself with immense dignity after his capture, continuing as he had done while holding..." Read more
"...This must have driven the southerners crazy. He was not a very good business man or maybe he just had his mind on other things...." Read more
"...Both my husband and I devoured this book. What a fascinating and driven character he was and this book brought him to life for us...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2012Tony Horwitz has written a thoroughly researched and eminently readable account of the life of one of history's most complicated and vexing characters. John Brown was a visionary hero ahead of his time. He was also a radical outlaw willing to match violence for violence and even take life in cold blood. He was also a seriously flawed human being whose inflexible nature and single-minded devotion to his cause and utter inability to manage business affairs left his wife and brood of children in near poverty and very likely imperiled his own mission. There is simply no way to reconcile this singularly complex figure into any of the neat packages history has tried to stuff him into - whether hero, madman or villain. Yet this fanatical hero-villain, in the course of a blundered raid, lit the spark that ended slavery and exploded the "Southern Way of Life".
After a brief prologue setting the stage for the raid on Harper's ferry, Horwitz returns to the beginning to trace what is known - and what Brown himself reported - of Brown's childhood and early life. Brown was raised by a strict Calvinist who espoused hard work, piety, strident punishment of sins, and the equality of all people, including blacks - a radical idea at the time, even among abolitionists. John, left motherless at age eight by his mother's death in childbirth, seems to have emulated his father in both temperament and action.
Early in this life, Brown "consecrated" himself to the cause of ending slavery, and he enlisted his wife and sons as a sort of independent army. While his business affairs careened up and down, Brown's passion, determination and independence brought him the attention - and financial support - of wealthy Abolitionist backers from Gerrit Smith to William Lloyd Garrison.
Brown's initial cause was keeping Kansas a free state during the fierce "Bleeding Kansas" period when both pro- and anti-slavery interests were pumping settlers into the new territory. Brown believed, rightly, that there was too little check on the pro-slavery forces who were using violence and intimidation to enforce their way. Brown came to believe that the non-violent response of the anti-slavery movement was inadequate, so in the middle of the night Brown, several of his sons and some allies abducted, killed and apparently mutilated six men believed to be important leaders of the pro-slavery faction. Brown and his allies both denied responsibility and claimed self-defense, but Horwitz dissects these defenses and concludes that the killings were likely carried out to inspire fear and deter future violence. Such an act could justifiably be labeled terrorism, but then, one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter. But regardless of the effect on Kansas, the effect on Brown's men was devastating. In addition to some physical wounds, some of the participants suffered mental breakdowns and life-long impairment. Brown himself, however, was unscathed and ready to do further battle.
Following the massacre, Brown, now an outlaw and a wanted man, retreated back east where he carried on his crusade in various forms while planning his attack on "Africa", Brown's code word for the slave-holding South. While imploring money from his benefactors and recruiting soldiers to his cause, Brown spoke of raids along the Southern border to free slaves (who would, it was believed, join Brown's band), strike fear into the hearts of slave owners, and make slave holding economically unviable. But little by little, through both coded references and open admission, Brown began to make it clear that something bigger was in the works, although what the something was, and what was the ultimate aim, remained rather muddy even as Brown and his rag-tag band of diverse followers began the march on Harper's Ferry.
Often throughout his life, Brown proclaimed that he received his orders from God. If that were true, then God is a pretty lousy general. Horwitz presents a masterful portrayal of the raid on Harper's Ferry, the bungling involved, the sheer luck that it succeeded as well as it did, and the tragedy along the way. Inadequate men, lack of communication and poor coordination of supplies hampered efforts from the beginning. An early and unintended shooting of a free black man (ironically, by white men seeking to liberate blacks, as Horwitz points out) was an ill omen and aroused the anger of the town. Brown failed to take into account the arrival of a train on the bridge to Harper's Ferry, and he wildly underestimated the support he would receive from both the townsfolk and the freed slaves (what few slaves he actually freed, that is). Furthermore, even once he captured the arsenal, Brown failed to use any of the federal arms or ammunition.
But as big a failure as the raid seemed to be, the aftermath of the raid brought much of the success Brown appeared to be seeking. Brown comported himself with composed dignity and did not flinch at the prospect of death. He willingly, even eagerly, met and spoke with all who sought him out (except his own wife, that is), especially pro-slavery advocates. Through inspired and eloquent speeches, writings and conversations, Brown sought to propound his vision of a just and equal society without the evils of slavery and oppression. He sought to make Southerners see the error of their ways and convert to Abolition. He largely failed on that count, but he did impress his opponents with his courage and conviction. He also appealed to Northern Abolitionists to bring pressure to bear against the iniquity of slavery.
Horwitz speculates - compellingly - that this platform to speak and be heard is what lay beneath the raid all along. Brown could never have expected to hold Harper's Ferry or free very many slaves. And ultimately, despite his violent acts, Brown was too conflicted and ambivalent about using violence to end slavery. Brown claimed not to want to take life, but the one life he could offer was his own. Through his martyrdom, Brown hoped to achieve what he and his meager band of followers could not otherwise achieve. And through is dignity and courage in his final days and his clarion call to the decency of all humans, he did in fact, in many ways, achieve what his violence did not.
Wrestling with the morality of the life of John Brown is no easy task. Is violence ever acceptable, even to end a great injustice? What about the men Brown lured into his fanatical plot without fully informing them of his plans - was it right to make martyrs of them too? What about free black porter Heyward Shepherd and the other innocent victims? And what right did Brown have to make his wife a widow and leave his children fatherless? Furthermore, this wrestling has to take into account the conditions and realities of Brown's time. It's easy now to point to the actual end of slavery as justification, but Brown had no way of knowing when or if slavery might end or how his actions might affect those bound in slavery. Following Brown's raid, life for slaves got a good deal harder, as slave owners became even more fearful of rebellion. Had the Civil War not ended slavery, Brown's actions would have been no favor to blacks bound in that "peculiar institution".
These issues and many more will never be neat and clean, but Horwitz does an excellent job of wrestling with them. Horwitz rules out the madman option, but wavers somewhat between the hero and villain, ultimately landing on the hero side. However, he pulls no punches and makes no attempt to tidy up history or present Brown as an unblemished hero. Horwitz closely examines the historical facts, dissects them this way and that, and paints a painfully honest and detailed portrait of villain-hero John Brown against the ugly backdrop of the times in which he lived. Highly recommended for all adults as well as kids who are mature enough and ready to wrestle with weighty, ambiguous moral issues.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2014What is one to make of John Brown? In his day, John Brown was a controversial figure, admired by some, hated by many and loved by few. It was his devotion to God juxtaposed to his attraction to violence that left many people puzzled and uneasy. We are still perplexed about him 155 years after his death. John Brown was a misdirected man who though highly moral saw violence as the most appropriate and necessary solution to the problem of slavery. Tony Horwitz has taken on the challenge of explaining this seemingly inexplicable man. The manner by which John Brown, a rigidly religious man ended up being hanged for treason is the subjects of this well crafted and well written book. The narrative is rich and the research impeccable. I rated this book a five since it allowed us into the mind of this complicated man and allows us to make our own judgements.
For those who admired Horwitz’s previous books, especially his ability to put himself into the story, be warned that this is a different kind of book. In Confederates in the Attic, Horwitz walked the streets of the South in search of his narrative. For this book, he claims, “walking the footsteps of history is not the same as being there “. He might see the same sights that Brown saw but he sought a more intimate experience. He wished to be inside Brown’s head. This is a tall order. For historical figures, one is limited to reports of a person’s behavior rather than his innermost thoughts. Nevertheless in the process of researching this book, he has attempted to gain insights into the mind of John Brown and he has shared these insights with us. Whether these insights are sufficient to fully explain John Brown is up to the reader to decide.
Horwitz attributed John Brown’s religious convictions as well a propensity to violence to his father who was staunchly religious, a confirmed abolitionist as well as a believer in corporal punishment. John was subjected to his father’s sermonizing and at the same time to his severe beatings. He thus came to believe that violence was an acceptable means to achieving God’s will. Horwiz explains that Brown’s Puritan forbearers “believed that they had a covenant with God to make America a moral beacon to the world...and that slavery was a breach of divine law.” That John Brown sought violence to defend God’s law is understandable and in a sense predictable.
According to Horwitz, Brown began to see violence as the only way to achieve abolition when he learned of Nat Turner’s unbridled and cruel efforts to end slavery. Nat Turner was an African-American slave and minister who was born the same year as John Brown. Turner led a group of slaves on a rampage, resulting in the deaths of 55 white men, women and children. This action resonated with Brown’s religious commitment and baseline violent predisposition. Brown attempted to echo Turner’s actions by his own efforts in Kansas and at Harper’s Ferry. Both Brown and Turner traumatized the country, and helped to ignite regional differences, which eventually erupted into the Civil War.
. Although Horwitz is a journalist by trade, it would be a mistake to believe that the book is simply reporting. Some will recognize the structure of drama in the journalistic report. As one remembers from freshman English, the structure of drama consists of 1) an exposition, during which the characters and issues are introduced, 2) a crisis describing an acting out of the conflicts and 3) a denouement when the conflicts are resolved. Horwitz begins the exposition with a report of the characters. Here the story takes on an epic quality with the description of the Brown family, his two marriages and his 20 children. His father was an influential figure in Brown’s life and helped to shape his belief system. Like his father, John was an avowed abolitionist, but unlike his father he was a “warrior” rather than a pacifist. Most importantly, John inherited his Calvinist beliefs from his father. Calvinism attempts to confront the problem of free will in the face of an omniscient and omnipotent God. As a Calvinist his father taught John that God has a pre-determined plan for everyone. For Calvinists there is no free will, only the will of God. Thus, one must accept the notion that God is responsible for our actions, but does not necessarily approve of them. Approval comes with being chosen as one of God’s elect. The process of election is arbitrary and is independent of the actions of the believer. One can only hope, through faith that one is of God’s chosen. John Brown spent his life searching for this answer.
The crisis consists of the raids in Kansas and finally at Harper’s Ferry. Here Brown modeled his actions on the Old Testament figure of Gideon who was instructed by God to take a small band of men and to destroy the Mideanites at night. Acting out the Gideon story Brown assembled his men for a final bloodletting in Kansas and Harper’s Ferry. His goals were not well formulated, but he hoped to provoke a slave rebellion. The attacks in Kansas accomplished little but to further inflame both sides in “bleeding Kansas.” The attack on Harper’s Ferry is described in detail by Horwitz and represents the culmination of all that preceded it, but is anticlimactic, accomplishing little.
The significance of the Harper’s Ferry raid was not evident at the time. It appeared to represent a minor event ending in failure. Nevertheless it had profound consequences. The attack helped spark the civil war that would come 2 years later. Horwitz concludes “Brown’s dream of arming blacks to fight for their freedom was realized not at Harper’s Ferry but in the trenches of Petersburg and in the low lands of South Carolina.” The midnight raid of John Brown led to the rise of an oppressed people and in so doing gave the nation “ a new birth of freedom.”
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. The denouement of this drama is provided in the final chapters, which describe Brown’s execution. It is a this moment that important characters that will shape the future all come together, as if frozen in time: Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, Jeb Stuart and John Wilkes booth. It was by his death, that the meaning of his life was made clear and his influence became manifest. Preparing for his death, Brown is portrayed as serene and at peace with himself. He seemed confident that he would meet his God as one of the elect.
Horwitz began his book with a promise to get inside the head of John Brown. Are we satisfied that he has done that or was he simply reporting what he knew? Perhaps he gets inside the mind of John Brown by telling his story in as a complete a fashion that he could, but he goes beyond the telling of a story, he relates a drama. It is a drama that the whole nation was privy to. One recalls Hamlet who said,” The play’s the thing, wherein we will catch the conscious of the king”. The conscience of the nation was caught by the story of John Brown. Having said that, we wonder whether John Brown was a good man or a bad man. Is it possible for a good man to do bad things and for a bad man to do good things? We once again, turn to Hamlet” There is nothing good or bad, but thinking makes it so.”
Top reviews from other countries
- KScottReviewed in Sweden on January 22, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book. Pure history from Horwitz
This is a great book. If you (li,ke me) love Horwitz' books then you might be disappointed. This is not a history/travel book like his others. This is a pure history book. It is still a fantastic book and I enjoyed reading it very much, but it is not in the same vein as Horwitz' other books. I recommend it, but keep in mind that it is a bit different from his other books.
- DarrylReviewed in Canada on June 7, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Midnight Rising
A well researched and thoroughly interesting book about the flawed John Brown and how he amazingly could be said to have started the American Civil War.Reminds me somewhat of the Tea Party and arguing without factual evidence, just faith. Quite religious in its views and very American. An Excellent Read.
- TC in 08Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 5, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Horwitz on Harper's Ferry...
With @150 Civil War books in my library, this was the first one that I read that was solely about John Brown's raid in Harper's Ferry. And, being a fan of Tony Horwitz, it did not disappoint. There is a wealth in detail about Brown's life, his previous actions out west and his efforts to generate interest (and funding) from northeners who had abolitionis tendencies. The planning for the raid, the actual event and its aftermath get a thorough coverage. It is also, like Horwitz's other books, a joy to read and includes numerous photos of the participants and locations of events.
- T Jorgensen-NelsonReviewed in Canada on November 10, 2023
1.0 out of 5 stars Damaged book
Parcel was left on wet doorstep and was damaged.
- M. LloydReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 25, 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars The story is well told at a good pace and held my attention well
I'd heard a lot about the legendary John Brown through reading Civil War books so decided to read this book dedicated to the man himself and his actions at Harpers Ferry. The story is well told at a good pace and held my attention well. Would recommend.