"In the beginning," John Locke wrote, "all the world was America." The
land was vast, verdant, and bountiful but devoid of one element:
humanity. That gap has been filled for some twenty-five thousand years,
by the continuous passage of travellers who have come to the American
strand, crossing first by land bridge, later ocean vessel, and then
aircraft, to see what the New World presented. For some, it was a place
of new beginnings and fresh starts; for others, a land of bondage and
subjugation; for all, a region of stark contrasts between what the world
may have been and what it could be. A Traveller's History of the U.S.A.
guides today's travellers through a general history of the people and
places of America. Starting with the lay of the land and the cultures of
its first inhabitants, it examines the rise of European colonies, the
emergence of a new nation, and the tragic, triumphant, twisting course
of its republican experiment, right up to the present day.