Beth C.
Written on Nov 13, 2014
I freely admit I knew nothing about Adams coming into this book. I was a poor history student in school (hated all the dates) and am just now making up for it as an adult, where I find it much more interesting where there are no tests involved :) His upbringing was singular for the time, as was the pressure he must have felt as the son of revolutionaries. The book certainly covers his strange education, but I made the mistake of believing it was ONLY about that. It is not - it covers the majority of his life, and what he learned from both official schooling, and those life lessons that everyone gets.
While I did learn quite a bit about Adams, by the final 1/3 of the book, I was ready to be done. It was a bit *too* thorough for me, and felt plodding in places. If I'm totally honest, it may actually have been closer to 1/2 of the book. I think quite a bit could have been edited to provide just as thorough a look at Adams, without feeling like wading through the actual sands of the hourglass.
In all, I remain glad I read the book - it was informative, and reasonably interesting. But for those out there like me, who enjoy history but don't need to read quite so many entries into one person's daily life, then this might *not* be the book for you.