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Buddy Read: The British Are Coming


Just a couple of tidbits I have found thus far – using squirrel tails as paintbrushes – I did not realize I have plenty of paintbrushes scrambling about among my backyard tree branches. Also, that it took over 2,000 mature oaks to build one large English warship – hard to imagine all the craftsmanship that went into its construction.
Also, there is Atkinson’s wonderful way of relating history and use of language. He called Lord North’s ability to remember things, as an “adhesive memory.” We all could use one of those.

Steven, I was pleasantly surprised to see the English side of things. I had read that Atkinson took this approach but was not expecting so much. I like seeing the other sides view and I have a feeling that will continue.
As always Atkinson's story telling and writing is stellar. He makes it all come alive.

I agree that Atkinson is a splendid writer. I loved the opening with George III. It sets up the context for the coming Revolution, and the reasons behind it in passages such as:
George’s resolve helped his ministers rally around three critical assumptions, each of which proved false: that most colonists remained loyal to the Crown, notwithstanding troublemakers in Massachusetts capable of inciting a rabble; that firmness, including military firepower if necessary, would intimidate the obstreperous and restore harmony; and that failure to reassert London’s authority would eventually unstitch the empire, causing Britain to “revert to her primitive insignificancy in the map of the world,” as a member of the House of Commons warned.

I have always been interested in Dr. Joseph Warren and glad to see Atkinson discusses him early. If I am not mistaken, he was killed during the Battle of Bunker. I have always wondering if he was not killed so early on in the war, would he have become one of the more famous of our Revolutionary War heros. Someday I am going to read a good biography of him.


I have always been interested in Dr. Joseph Warren and glad to see Atkinson disc..."
Steven, I wonder if you have read Philbrick's Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution. He discussed Warren quite a bit in that one. Of course it is not a biography.
I've finished the prologue and was happy to see Ben Franklin in it.
Quite a different representation than McCullough gave him in his biography of John Adams.


I have Bunker Hill on my TBR. Good to know that others have read it and liked it.

I have just finished the Prologue and found it very interesting. I haven't read that much about the Revolutionary War since high school and usually choose European, and particularly British history, when reading history or historical fiction.
I realized I had a very negative opinion of King George III. I'm assuming it comes from the American point of view that all my books usually were written from. He seems utterly baffled at the attitude of the Colonials. I did appreciate learning more about his family history and marriage. I thought the recruitment of soldiers going to America was funny. "Each regiment was permitted to take sixty women, twelve servants, and eight-six tons of baggage". And my husband thinks I pack too much!
I plan to read a chapter or two every day but I'm already feeling anxious to get back to it.

If I ever get to Boston, I am going to make copies and bring them along with me so can compare them with what is on the ground today.

If..."
I agree with you about the maps. I am a map person and need to envision with a map where I am. When reading fiction, I always look up on a map about the location.
So I was thrilled to see the maps included in this. I liked that there was a map of the British going to Concord and Lexington and then one for their retreat.


I'm doing the same thing with Bunker Hill part.

Oh, lucky you-I was thinking a zoom-in feature would have been so much better!


On the other hand, bad maps in fantasy sci fi drive me crazy. The one in The Name of the Wind doesn't even seem to relate to the book. Of course I once heard Rothfuss comment on how much he hates maps and begrudges having to create one for his books.

The term dates at least to the 17th century, when it was applied to Puritan roundheads during the English Civil War.[3] It came to include residents of colonial New England, who were mostly Puritans in support of the Parliamentarians during the war. It probably is derived from the Biblical words spoken by David after the death of his friend Jonathan, "I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan" (2 Samuel 1:26). As Kenneth Hopper and William Hopper put it, "Used as a term of abuse for their ... Puritan opponents by Royalists during the English Civil War, it was applied by British officers to the rebellious colonists during the American Revolution".[4]
A popular folk tale about the origin of the term holds that the character is derived from Jonathan Trumbull (1710–85), Governor of the State of Connecticut, which was the main source of supplies for the Northern and Middle Departments during the American Revolutionary War. It is said that George Washington uttered the words, "We must consult Brother Jonathan," when asked how he could win the war.[5] That origin is doubtful, however, as neither man made reference to the story during his lifetime and the first appearance of the story has been traced to the mid-19th century, long after their deaths.[6]
The character was adopted by citizens of New England from 1783 to 1815, when Brother Jonathan became a nickname for any Yankee sailor, similar to the way that G.I. is used to describe members of the U.S. Army.


I have heard of roundheads - the name originated from their haircuts, sometimes even shaving the tops in the manner of monks.

Although I know that Washington entered a real mess when he
came to Boston, it still always makes me shake my head when I read about it again. I love this description of Atkison's
He quickly saw that unlike the fantasy army that existed in congressional imaginations-grandly intended as Washington's commission declared "for the defense of American liberty and for repelling every hostile invasion thereof-" this army was woefully unskilled; bereft of artillery and engineering expertise..
It seems our first congressional representatives lived in a dream world, as some of our present day occupants do.

I loved this description of Washington - Atkinson has a wonderful way of providing the basic info while also illuminating a personality:
"He was a talented administrator, with a brain suited to executive action, thanks to a remarkable memory, a knack for incisive thinking and clear writing, and a penchant for detail, learned first as a young officer and then practiced daily as suzerain of his sprawling, complex estate on the Potomac River at Mount Vernon. His fortunes, personal and pecuniary, grew considerably in 1759 when he married Virginia’s richest widow, the amiable and attractive Martha Dandridge Custis. Over the years, their convenient business arrangement had become a love match."

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ERYukmb...
Well I did see it live 3 times and watched the film a few times....

I loved this bit:
There was much they did not know or understood imperfectly: that the American population, now 2.5 million, was more than doubling every quarter century, an explosive growth unseen in recorded European history and fourfold England’s rate; that two-thirds of white colonial men owned land, compared to one-fifth in England; that two-thirds were literate, more than in England; that in most colonies two-thirds could vote, compared to one Englishman in six; that provincial America glowed with Enlightenment aspiration, so that a city like Philadelphia now rivaled Edinburgh for medical education and boasted almost as many booksellers—seventy-seven—as England’s top ten provincial towns combined.
I can't help but contrast to France on the brink of the French Revolution and the chaotic Reign of Terror that followed. I remember from my French history classes in the mid-70s how the success of the Americans in rebelling against the Brits as well as the writings of the American leaders (and of course French Enlightenment writers like Diderot who also inspired the Americans) served as inspiration for the leaders of the French Revolution. But of course it rebelling against a royal rule and nobility on the same ground as the rebels was a whole different revolution.
But I found those statistics quite interesting and had not knwn them before.
I also enjoyed the brief description the Stamp Act on p. 8 -- you know there are still tax stamps on deeds and stock certificates in NYS. In fact, the history of these tax stamps dates from the Dutch in the 17th Century. According to NYS history, after the Brits took the colonies from the Dutch, the Crown gave each state of the colonies the authority to impose such document taxes. For the states this was a key source of revenue, and the ability to impose a stamp tax and collect it was jealously guarded. No doubt the colonists were outraged at the Crown's sudden change.




You're right - this is the case in all the war-related books I have read. I remember quotes from the American Civil War saying "it will be over by Christmas" (it started in April 1861 and was over in April 1865). The same thing happened when British troops went off to fight in WWI.

I am also in Chapter 5 (it took me a while to find outsince I have a Kindle that is packed with books and is very slow to respond). I tend to go more by percentages completed.

Yeah, we are overdue for a revolt! We didn't even protest mask or vaccine mandates. We do great protests though for causes like Black Lives Matter and Me Too. NYC even has a vegan mayor!

Further, the king had purchased additional loyalty by sprinkling lucrative sinecures and patronage appointments among members of both houses, including eleven grooms of the bedchamber, a master of the jewel office, a master falconer, an usher of the exchequer, rangers of the royal forests, seven equerries, and various masters of the harriers, buckhounds, and staghounds.

Also, the stock certificate stamps are actual stamps at 5 cents per share with glue on the back that you affix to the front of a certificate being transfered and then 3 lines are penned through to cancel the stamps affixed. Quite ritualistic.
Deeds no longer get a physical stamp, not even one using an inkpad. Now a computer generated sheet when deed recorded includes a line describing the amount paid for the deed tax...which is based on a formula linked to consideration. All pageantry lost.

I really am trailing here but will likely catch-up soon and read more at same pace. In meantime I just finished the Prologue and agree with all your comments. Atkinson writes so engagingly, I smile and nod and highlight happily. Even make a side comment.
I love starting on the British side, showing what lead to so many policies, laws, and decisions that launched a war that resulted in independence from empire - a first - and in hindsight was ill-conceived from the British perspective.
Since I tend to read more Peninsular War set books, I am far more familiar with the Mad King George and the Regency than with King George as able monarch. Atkinson portrays a ruler who simply did not have the ability, sophistication, to handle obstreperous colonials. All severely underestimated the grit, skill, and determination of the colonists, forgetting the nature of those who made up the colonists in the first place.
@Olivermagnus - that whole section describing packing for war just had me smiling! Next time some airline clerk makes some comment about my overweight luggage when returning from a trip abroad (should I ever take one again thanks to COVID), even when I already told her/him I will pay the added charge, is going to hear me quote that passage!
I also was delighted to encounter Franklin and learn of his London years, again new information.
I think my favorite passage though is this:
The odds were heavily stacked against the Americans: no colonial rebellion had ever succeeded in casting off imperial shackles. But, as Voltaire had observed, history is filled with the sound of silken slippers going downstairs and wooden shoes coming up.
Voltaire just knows how to turn a descriptive phrase!

I finished chapter 5 last night Steven.

As did I BnB! A lot of things I did not know about. Once again Atkinson's writing got to me, as he described Arnold's trek though the Canadian wilderness.

Further, the king had purchased additional loyalty by sprinklin..."
I am thinking I would like the Master of the bedchamber position-probably lots of downtime for reading at that post 😁


I know, I loved that part and reading it I thought "Someone ought to write a novel about this."

I know, I loved that..."
Right? Everything I have ever read about Arnold boils down to his treason

I started last night but didn't get far before falling asleep. However, I realized after Atkinson's mention of Margaret Kemble Gage and her possibly being the source of leaks to the colonists, that what is so effective about his writing is that it creates images and scenes in my mind, often using just a few sentences, that make my reading feel like I'm watching the action either live or in a movie. I could see and hear Margaret listening at dinner table conversations then sharing the info surreptitiously. I could see and hear King George III procession to Portsmouth. I was in Parliament for the votes. I could see Franklin and his household taking leave of London.
That is Atkinson's writing gift for me.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Men Who Lost America: British Leadership, the American Revolution, and the Fate of the Empire (other topics)The Men Who Lost America - British Command during the Revolutionary War and the Preservation of the Empire (other topics)
Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754 - 1766 (other topics)
Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754 - 1766 (other topics)
Improbable Patriot: The Secret History of Monsieur de Beaumarchais, the French Playwright Who Saved the American Revolution (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Georges Edouard Lemaître (other topics)Elizabeth Sarah Kite (other topics)
Frédéric Grendel (other topics)
Louis de Loménie (other topics)
Joel Richard Paul (other topics)
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