<b>An all-American collection of essays on the pivotal moments in our nation's history by award-winning historians, the third in the bestselling series.</b> <br /><br /> The "what if" concept is one of the most original and engaging on the current history bookshelf. The essays are chock-full of provocative ideas; they are as accessible to the general reader as they are to the scholar; and they are the perfect gift for the dedicated history buff on anyone's list. <br /><br /> In this new collection of never-before-published essays, our brightest historians speculate about some of America's more intriguing crossroads. Some irresistible highlights include: Caleb Carr (<i>The Alienist</i>) on America had there been no Revolution; Tom Wicker on the first time a vice president, John Tyler, succeeded a deceased president and its surprising ramifications; Jay Winik (April 1865) on the havoc that might have resulted if Booth had succeeded in his plan to assassinate Johnson and Seward as well as Lincoln; Antony Beevor (<i>The Fall of Berlin 1945</i>) on the possibility of Eisenhower's capture of Berlin before the Soviets' arrival there in 1945; and Robert Dallek (the upcoming <i>An Unfinished Life about John F. Kennedy</i>) on one of the most agonizing American "what if"s of all: what might have happened if JFK hadn't been assassinated.
还没人写过短评呢
还没人写过短评呢