Master historian David McCullough's classic book about some of
history's most daring and accomplished figures from Alexander von
Humboldt to Charles and Anne Lindbergh.
Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough has written profiles of
exceptional men and women who shaped the course of history and changed
how we see the world. Their remarkable stories express much that is
timeless about the human condition.
Here are Alexander von Humboldt, whose epic explorations of South
America surpassed in scope the Lewis and Clark expedition; Harriet
Beecher Stowe, "the little woman who made the big war"; Western artist
Frederic Remington; the extraordinary Louis Agassiz of Harvard; Charles
and Anne Lindbergh, and their fellow long-distance pilots Antoine de
Saint-Exupéry and Beryl Markham; Harry Caudill, the Kentucky lawyer who
awakened the nation to the tragedy of Appalachia; and David Plowden, a
contemporary photographer of vanishing America.
Different as they are from each other, McCullough's subjects have in
common a rare vitality and sense of purpose. These are brave companions:
to each other, to David McCullough, and to the reader, for with rare
storytelling ability McCullough brings us into the times they knew and
their very uncommon lives.