- Published: 15 June 2018
- ISBN: 9780345544230
- Imprint: Random House US Group
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 464
- RRP: $40.00
The Loyal Son
The War in Ben Franklin's House
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- Published: 15 June 2018
- ISBN: 9780345544230
- Imprint: Random House US Group
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 464
- RRP: $40.00
"The history of loyalist William Franklin and his famous father has been told before but not as fully or as well as it is by Daniel Mark Epstein in The Loyal Son. Mr. Epstein, a biographer and poet, has done a lot of fresh research and invests his narrative with literary grace and judicious sympathy for both father and son. . . . Mr. Epstein's engrossing account . . . illuminates the plight of the hundreds of thousands of British Americans who remained, during the Revolution, devoted to both crown and country." The Wall Street Journal "Illuminating . . . This is not only the stuff of high political drama; it's also, should one wish to treat it this way, a scintillating case study in family dysfunction. . . . Epstein, impressively, does as much as any writer of history reasonably can do to erase the sense of inevitability of outcome that might have dulled the story. . . . It's a story that, like all real families' stories, leaves loose ends--but Epstein's narrative is, for all that, deeply rewarding." National Review "A gripping history of a family torn apart by political upheaval . . . Drawing on much unpublished correspondence as well as published works, the author constructs a fast-paced, vivid narrative with a host of characters whose appearance and personality he etches with deft concision. . . . A perceptive, gritty portrayal of the frenzy of war and a father and son caught at its tumultuous center." Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Elegant . . . moving . . . In Epstein's hands, the case of Benjamin and William Frnaklin becomes superbly illuminating." The New Republic "Epstein . . . skillfully shows how the American Revolution divided communities and households. . . . Where the book succeeds splendidly is in rescuing William Franklin from obscurity. He was a loving son, an intelligent and honorable man, and a skilled (and final) royal governor of New Jersey who paid dearly by losing everything for his principled, agonizing fidelity to Britain. . . . Yet while never exculpating William for his choices, Epstein makes him thoroughly sympathetic. Epstein's portrayals result in a thoroughly enjoyable and well-informed . . . work of history." Publishers Weekly