In this controversial, wide-ranging, and fearlessly candid book, Kenneth
S. Lynn argues that too many of our current commentators on the American
past are out of touch with historical reality. His targets range from
the currently fashionable but fantastic idea that the Declaration of
Independence derives from a communitarian rather than individualistic
philosophy to misinterpretations of the lives of Emerson, Walter
Lippmann, Hemingway, and Max Perkins. In each case Lynn reveals the
tendency of literary and intellectual historians to impose precooked
formulas upon the evidence they profess to study.