"We are provincials no longer," said Woodrow Wilson on March 5, 1917, at his second inaugural. He spoke on the eve of America's entrance into World War I, as Russia teetered between autocracy and democracy. Just ten days after Wilson's declaration, Tsar Nicholas II abdicated the throne, ending a three-centuries-long dynasty and ushering in the false dawn of a democratic Russia. Wilson asked Congress to declare war against Germany a few short weeks later, asserting the United States' new role as a global power and its commitment to spreading American ideals abroad. Will Englund draws on a wealth of contemporary diaries, memoirs, and newspaper accounts to furnish texture and personal detail to the story of that month. March 1917 celebrates the dreams of warriors, pacifists, revolutionaries, and reactionaries, even as it demonstrates how their successes and failures constitute the origin story of the complex world we inhabit a century later.
Al Capone's Beer Wars
John J. Binder
audiobookHitler's Secret Army : A Hidden History of Spies, Saboteurs, and Traitors in World War II
Tim Tate
audiobook1922: Scenes from a Turbulent Year : Scenes from a Turbulent Year
Nick Rennison
audiobookSmyrna, September 1922
Lou Ureneck
audiobookAmerica, 1908: The Dawn of Flight, the Race to the Pole, the Invention of the Model T and the Making of a Modern Nation
Jim Rasenberger
bookThe Boom : How Fracking Ignited the American Energy Revolution and Changed the World
Russell Gold
bookRogues' Gallery
Philip Hook
audiobookBrilliance and Fire
Rachelle Bergstein
audiobookThe Southern Key
Michael Goldfield
audiobookThe Storm of the Century : Tragedy, Heroism, Survival, and the Epic True Story of America's Deadliest Natural Disaster: The Great Gulf Hurricane of 1900
Al Roker, William Hogeland
audiobookThe Bully Pulpit : Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism
Doris Kearns Goodwin
audiobookThe Colonel and Little Missie : Buffalo Bill, Annie Oakley, and the Beginnings of
Larry McMurtry
book