My first genuine deep experience with revisionist history
This was the required textbook in my Revised American History II course this semester. If one wants to read a cross-cutting perspective to what one would find in older writings, one can use this as a decent contrast of previously accepted history. The author does very little to hide a liberal bias and comfortably describes times of conservative control in the US as dark periods. One of the things that particularly surprised me about the history, was the overwhelming number of times the author stated that "one expert," "one historian," or , " one pick-your-job-title" said something. He doesn't say who he's quoting or referencing, so one reader cannot follow through. It happened so.often that I began to wonder whether I actually had to cite any sources at all in my papers, or if maybe I could just state that "one scientist" had said whatever perspective I'd like to advance, and be done with it. Particularly interesting to me were the periods of history that I either had experienced for myself, or had heard adults around me discuss and use as warning stories while I was a child. Fascinating to see it re-spun like the tale of how the Three little pigs were so cruel to that poor wolf. One point where the author is clearly out of his bounds though is in his following of Supreme Court decisions. Admittedly a confusing subject for the average lay-citizen, It baffled the author in the same ways. He completely missed how constitutional law or the court functions, and instead made it appear as almost a second legislative body with a political bias. So he was continuously at a loss when the court seemed to rule both for and against different positions in history. He couldn't see how it was because of how and whether the arguments made in the case appealed to the constitution and how logical they were, and instead made its sound very surprising that the court often seemed "reverse itself" or rule in ways against how the majority of justices were supposed to have been leaning on his estimate of their biases. All in all, interesting, but I don't recommend getting your history only from this one vendor.