The first of four books written by Isaac Asimov in the mid-1970s tracing the history of the North American continent. This is a lively narrative covering the initial colonization some 30,000 years ago via the Alaskan land bridge (exposed when ice age glaciation lowered the sea), through the first desire of independence from Britain. In between are riveting summaries of the activities of the Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch and English, and numerous others who landed here earlier who couldn't make a go of it.
The author wrote this for a juvenile audience - the dust jacket reads "Ages 12-up." Asimov explains history as clearly as he explains every branch of science in hundreds (yes, hundreds) of non-fiction books, and were any adult to feel a gap in their knowledge of this history, this series will remediate it. Primarily though, this book serves the juvenile reader with an account of our history they are not likely to forget, and which they can then build upon with adult-level works. Dreary, committee-generated public school books kill off a child's budding interest in history with bite-sized bits of important topics that deserve several pages, surrounded by a smattering of multi-colored sidebars. If kids can be absorbed into 800-page Harry Potter novels, why not a couple hundred pages of appropriately detailed history?
In this book, you'll read that Thanksgiving was not merely a celebration of survival and friendship between Puritan and Indian, but that it really wasn't much of a peace offering. A principal reason for the lack of hostility between locals and newcomers was that smallpox and other diseases had already done much to decimate Indian populations before the Mayflower's arrival (thanks to ancestral non-immunity to germs imported by the Spanish much earlier in Central and South America). Asimov provides the pithy counterpoint to the typically sympathetic account of the Puritan struggle to practice their religion: " although the Puritans had arrived in Massachusetts to be free to worship as they pleased, they were not the least interested in according others the same privilege."
Asimov, a professed atheist (but also a brilliant historian and explainer of the Christian Bible), has just the right take on the Salem witch trials (not covered at all in my 13 year-old son's school text), a summary you are unlikely to find in any school text bought by tax dollars:
"Protestants, who paid more attention to the
literal words of the Bible than did the Catholics,
were rather more apt to fear witches and find
them everywhere."
Unfortunately, this and the rest of Isaac Asimov's fifteen or so "juvenile" history texts are out of print. You can find these books on eBay. Sadly, they are often library discards, but many public libraries still have them. Sniffing a sad probability, I went to Barnes and Noble and asked where the juvenile history section was. No such section, I was told. So, if trade publishers have ceded juvenile history as a category to the textbook publishers, it explains (in my mind) the general ignorance and disinterest in the subject by Americans. It explains Sarah Palin to some degree. How do you expect adults to read and enjoy history if, as children, the only history they read lacks the viewpoint of a single author who stitches events together into a lively narrative? Seek this and the three subsequent books in this series out for yourself and for your children - I give it my highest recommendation.