This is a popular history, condensed from a Bancroft Prize winning book by the same author. For a book written in the early 1950's this is a fairly balanced look at the culture of pre-revolutionary America. The author uses John Adam's contention that the American revolution actually took place in the hearts and minds of the colonists before the actual shooting started. What I found interesting is that the strengths and weaknesses that still beset our democracy can be seen while the USA was still in the womb. Somehow a mass of petty, self-interested, grasping materialists were able to elevate their love of liberty and their egalitarian view of the world to form a more or less perfect union. Of particular note was the author's contention that poverty was viewed from the beginning as a vice brought on by some moral flaw in the impoverished. There were laws that forbade living alone (because one might become a burden on society). In either case, the poor and the solitary were "warned out of town." I am amazed that we have made the progress that we have when it comes to quality of life issues for the less fortunate.