Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: A Savage Empire

Author: Alan Axelrod
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1
Genres/categories: History
Culture: France, Canada

Purchase/research links:
A surprising and sweeping history that reveals the fur trade to be the driving force behind conquest, colonization, and revolution in early America

Combining the epic saga of Hampton Sides's Blood and Thunder with the natural history of Mark Kurlansky's Cod, popular historian Alan Axelrod reveals the astonishingly vital role a small animal--the beaver--played in the creation of our nation. The author masterfully relays a story often neglected by conventional histories: how lust for fur trade riches moved monarchs and men to launch expeditions of discovery, finance massive corporate enterprises, and wage war. Deftly weaving cultural and military narratives, the author chronicles how Spanish, Dutch, French, English, and Native American tribes created and betrayed alliances based on trapping and trade disputes, producing a surprisingly complex series of loyalties that endured throughout the Revolution and beyond.
Similar books:

A Distant Mirror
by Barbara W. Tuchman

The Waning of the Middle Ages
by Johan Huizinga

The Gargoyles of Notre-Dame
by Michael Camille

Montcalm and Wolfe
by Francis Parkman

The Montreal Canadiens
by D'Arcy Jenish

Strange Defeat
by Marc Bloch

Love in the Western World
by Denis de Rougemont

1867
by Christopher Moore

The Occitan War
by Laurence W. Marvin

The Oxford History of the French Revolution
by William Doyle

Transforming Paris
by David P. Jordan

A Concise History of the French Revolution
by Sylvia Neely

The Conquest of Morocco
by Douglas Porch

The Worst Hard Time
by Timothy Egan

Rubicon
by Tom Holland

All Hell Let Loose: The World at War 1939-1945
by Max Hastings

100 Amazing Facts About the Negro with Complete Proof
by J. A. Rogers

Dreamers and Deceivers
by Glenn Beck

Twenty Million Tons Under the Sea
by Daniel V. Gallery

History
by Adam Hart-Davis