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A leather-bound Collector's Edition personally hand signed by Stephen E. Ambrose on a special title page.
Easton Press, Norwalk, Ct. 1998. Easton Press, Stephen E. Ambrose , "Undaunted Courage" Signed Limited Edition.
In this sweeping adventure story, Stephen E. Ambrose, the bestselling author of D-Day,
presents the definitive account of one of the most momentous journeys
in American history. Ambrose follows the Lewis and Clark Expedition
from Thomas Jefferson's hope of finding a waterway to the Pacific,
through the heart-stopping moments of the actual trip, to Lewis's
lonely demise on the Natchez Trace. Along the way, Ambrose shows us the
American West as Lewis saw it -- wild, awsome, and pristinely
beautiful. Undaunted Courage is a stunningly told action tale that will delight readers for generations.
Includes all the classic Easton
Press qualities:
*
Premium Leather * Silk Moire Endleaves *
Distinctive Cover Design * Hubbed Spine, Accented in Real
22KT Gold * Satin Ribbon Page
Marker * Gilded Page Edges *
Long-lasting, High Quality Acid-neutral Paper *
Smyth-sewn Pages for Strength and Durability *
Beautiful Illustrations
About the Author
Stephen Ambrose At the
University of Wisconsin in the 1950s, Stephen Ambrose played football
as a Badger for three years. He was a left guard on offense and a
middle linebacker on defense, and had he been just 10 pounds heavier,
he would have taken a shot at the pros. Instead, his life took an
entirely different course. Soon after completing both his
undergraduate and graduate studies at the University of Wisconsin
(which earned him a Ph.D. in history), Stephen Ambrose, a native of
Illinois, had his first book published. A biography of Army General
Henry W. Halleck, it was published by Louisiana State University Press
in 1962 with a first printing of fewer than 1,000 copies. At least one
copy must have been purchased, as he received a phone call from a fan,
President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Eisenhower had read Halleck: Lincoln's Chief of Staff,
and was impressed. The Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe
during World War II, and the two-term president of the United States
offered Ambrose (then age twenty-eight) an opportunity to assist in the
editing of his papers, and ultimately, to write an authorized biography
of the president. Needless to say he accepted the assignment. It was
this event that would shape his career as a writer. Ambrose's first biography of President Eisenhower, The Supreme Commander: The War Years of General Dwight D. Eisenhower,
appeared in 1970, the same year he became a full professor at the
University of New Orleans. He would go on to write three more
biographies of Eisenhower, all of which met with widespread acclaim.
After publishing the series of books on Eisenhower, the subject of his
next series of biographies was suggested to Ambrose by his editor,
Alice E. Mayhew. Ambrose did not have the same relationship with
Richard Nixon as he did with Eisenhower, but he was challenged by the
writing project Ms. Mayhew put before him. In 1987, Nixon, The Education of a Politician
was published. Although he admits to never liking President Nixon,
after writing two more books on this president, he grew to admire and
respect him. In fact, Ambrose didn't even meet President Nixon until
after the series was in print. This series of books, too, were
celebrated with critical acclaim. Ambrose's desire to write on
Lewis and Clark began in the mid 1970s. In the summer of 1976, to
celebrate the bicentennial of the United States, Stephen Ambrose, his
wife and their five children, traveled the Lemhi Pass in the Rocky
Mountains, where Meriwether Lewis was the first nonnative American to
cross the Continental Divide in August 1805. On this trip, Stephen and
his wife took turns reading to their children from the diaries of Lewis
and Clark. Being so moved by this uniquely American experience, his
family has repeated it every summer since -- visiting Montana, Idaho,
Oregon, Kansas, or the Dakotas, and following some piece of the trail.
The family has canoed more than 165 miles down the Missouri, backpacked
and horse- backed along the Lolo Trail, and turned in at night at
various Lewis and Clark campsites. After the publication of D-Day: June
6, 1944, Ambrose began to focus all of his attention of what would
become Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the
Opening of the American West. Stephen Ambrose, now a retired
professor from the University of New Orleans, lives in the Old South
community of Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, in his home, Merry Weather. He
also maintains a home in Helena, Montana, along the trail of Lewis and
Clark.
Photos (the book you will receive is in the original shrink wrap)
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