The I Index

Sean Wilentz,
The New York Times Book Review
... builds on strengths long evident in Brands’s books, combining expert storytelling with thoughtful interpretation vividly to render major events through the lives of the chief participants. Apart from a biography of U. S. Grant, Brands has until now had surprisingly little to say about the Civil War era, but this book presents a gripping account of the politics that led to Southern secession, war and the abolition of slavery.
David M. Shribman,
The Boston Globe
'Brown was a first martyr in the war that freed the slaves, Lincoln one of the last,' Brands writes in a tale told by a master storyteller, with a momentum and a power appropriate to the subject. In these pages we have the hare (Brown) and the tortoise (Lincoln). In these pages it is no fable, but instead one of the greatest, but surely the bloodiest, American stories..
Adam Rowe,
The Wall Street Journal
The Zealot and the Emancipator relates these familiar events skillfully without pretending to offer new material or original interpretations. The final 150 pages gallop through the Civil War, quoting extensively from Lincoln’s most famous works, with cursory paragraphs providing context. But Mr. Brands, who has written about nearly every era of American politics, seems to recognize that the contrast between Brown and Lincoln offers a lesson that has never been timelier. Prudence and idealism are complementary virtues. And zeal unencumbered by a concern for consequences is indistinguishable, in practice, from bloodlust..
Deborah Mason,
BookPage
Pulitzer Prize finalist Brands is a master storyteller.
Francis P. Sempa,
The New York Journal of Books
... a fascinating narrative.
Harry Levins,
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
So what makes Brands’ book worth reading? The answer: its deep look at its two main characters and their views on slavery.
Alexis Coe,
The Washington Post
...gripping.
Barbara Spindel,
The Christian Science Monitor
In The Zealot and the Emancipator, Brands foregrounds the central irony that while Brown embraced violence as a means to end slavery and Lincoln condemned it, Lincoln’s eventual path resulted in carnage beyond what Brown, who was executed in 1859, could have imagined. Brands is an adroit storyteller and captures both Brown’s intensity and zeal and Lincoln’s pragmatism and wit.
Mark Knoblauch,
Booklist
Brands skillfully lays out nuances in these two men’s lives, showing how both were affected by diverse characters from Frederick Douglass to Roger Taney..

Kirkus
The veteran historian maintains his high standards in this study of two of 19th-century America’s most significant figures.

Publishers Weekly
...an entertaining and insightful dual biography of revolutionary abolitionist.