U.S. History Reading Group discussion
The Great Bridge
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The Great Bridge Discussion
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Mike
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Aug 06, 2015 10:08AM

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Mike--I prefer historical figures to be portrayed as they actually were, not as great men (or great women). It's too simplistic.

Mike wrote: "I just finished part one and, while I'm enjoying the pace of the writing, I got caught up a bit on John Roebling. Clearly, McCullough wants us to see him as a man of genius. A Great Man. But I kept..."
Out of curiosity, what would you have liked to have seen McCullough do with the information that Roebling was not so nice?







Thanks for sharing, Jane! Could you share a bit about what you found difficult with it?


It was unexpected to me that the book included so many side stories - Tweed, Eads, politics, etc. I found them interesting though, so I don't hate him for it. The period from the late 19th century up until T. Roosevelt's presidency is a bit of a blind spot for me, so I appreciated the background. But, I could see how someone who already knows the period well would find it excessive.

I could see an argument that we could do with more on John's personal life and less of the side-stories later in the book. But as a matter of personal taste, I guess I just feel like that would have taken us further away from the story of the bridge.