Just this year alone (so far) I have acquired 19 books on Abraham Lincoln, plus two magazines focused on specific aspects of the Civil War. Most of these are recent copyrights. The seemingly old ones in the list that follows are actually more recent reprints (e.g., Halleck 1862 is not really a first edition from that era, much to my chagrin; and the Illinois Central Railroad Company 1905 is a modern disappointment).
The other dates reflect the actual age of the books. About half are confirmed first editions. Only one of the books in the list is signed, but ah, what a gem it is. Tony Kushner is the screenwriter for the Steven Spielberg Lincoln movie that won Daniel Day-Lewis his unprecedented third Best Actor Oscar. He signed a limited number of a special cloth edition (i.e., hardcover) at the Abraham Lincoln Book Shop in Chicago. And I have one.
Okay, enjoy the list while I work on my proposal. Will be back soon.
| Anderson, Dwight G. | Abraham Lincoln: The Quest for Immortality | 1982 |
| Berg, Scott W. | 38 Nooses: Lincoln, Little Crow, and the Beginning of the Frontier’s End | 2012 |
| Boritt, Gabor S. (ed) | The Lincoln Enigma: The Changing Faces of an American Icon | 2001 |
| Cromie, Alice | A Tour Guide to the Civil War: The Complete State-by-State Guide to Battlegrounds, Landmarks, Museums, Relics, and Sites (3rd Edition, Revised) | 1990 |
| Eliot, Alexander | Abraham Lincoln: An Illustrated Biography | 1985 |
| Gary, Ralph | Following in Lincoln’s Footsteps: A Complete Annotated Reference to Hundreds of Historical Sites Visited by Abraham Lincoln | 2001 |
| Halleck, Henry Wager | Elements of Military Art and Science | 1862 |
| Hartwig, D. Scott | To Antietam Creek: The Maryland Campaign of September 1862 | 2012 |
| Hirsch, David and Van Haften, Dan | Barack Obama, Abraham Lincoln, and the Structure of Reason | 2012 |
| Holzer, Harold | Lincoln: President-Elect: Abraham Lincoln and the Great Secession Winter 1860-1861 | 2008 |
| Illinois Central Railroad Company | Abraham Lincoln As Attorney for the Illinois Central Railroad Company | 1905 |
| Kushner, Tony | Lincoln: The Screenplay | 2012 |
| Lamon, Ward H. | The Life of Abraham Lincoln; From His Birth to his Inauguration as President (Illustrated Edition) | 2013 |
| Marvel, William (ed) | The Monitor Chronicles: One Sailor’s Account: Today’s Campaign to Recover the Civil War Wreck | 2000 |
| Nesbitt, Mark | Ghosts of Gettysburg: Spirits, Apparitions and Haunted Places of the Battlefield | 1991 |
| Redkey, Edwin S. (Ed) | A Grand Army of Black Men | 1992 |
| Spiegel, Allen D. | A. Lincoln: Esquire: A Shrewd, Sophisticated Lawyer in His Time | 2002 |
| Still, William N., Jr., Taylor, John M., and Delaney, Norman C. | Raiders and Blockaders: The American Civil War Afloat | 1998 |
| Wideman, John C. | Naval Warfare: Courage and Combat on the Water | 1997 |
| Railroads in the War (magazine) | 1991 | |
| The Hunter Becomes the Prey (magazine) | 2004 |
More about Abraham Lincoln.
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Each born on February 12, 1809 in very different parts of the world, Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin never met. Darwin spent five years traveling the world on The Beagle and eventually defined how we think about life. Lincoln spent four years staying pretty much in Washington DC and eventually came to define how we think of leadership.
Still, the book toggles between Lincoln’s life and Darwin’s life, comparing the two at key junctures in their maturation as thinkers, family men, and leaders. Because they were the same age many of these life choices occurred at roughly the same period of time. Contosta notes that both put off making decisions as to their life’s work since neither really wanted to follow too closely in the footsteps of their fathers. Lincoln traveled down the Mississippi on a flat boat before settling for some years in New Salem, Illinois. Darwin traveled around the world by ship for five years doing the research that would eventually lead to his most famous works. Once this phase was completed they each “found their calling,” Lincoln in politics and the law, Darwin in development and experimentation on what would eventually be called evolution.
The book spends some time after the early death of Lincoln and the much later death of Darwin to assess their impact on the world. Clearly the emancipation of the slaves and the subsequent problems with reconstruction led to issues experienced for another century (and continuing). And clearly Darwin’s theory of natural selection challenged the conventional thinking of the day. History has shown that many would “adapt” the work of these two influential men to serve their own purposes (e.g., “social Darwinism,” which Darwin would have been aghast to see).
Harold Holzer has a birthday.
Obama did not mention Lincoln by name during his 
Barack Obama, our first African-American President, took his oath of office in 2013 on the day we celebrated the birthday of the great civil rights leader,
Dr. Frank Smith, Jr. will be the speaker at the 










