About the Author:
Alan Axelrod, Ph.D., is a former professor of English at the University of Iowa. Currently an executive in the publishing industry, he has authored dozens of books, including America's Wars; The Penguin Dictionary of American Folklore, and the four-volume Encyclopedia of the American West. He has served as a consultant to numerous museums and cultural institutions and has been a creative consultant for, and on-camera personality in, the "Wild West" television documentary series, "Civil War Journal" on A&E, and The Discovery Channel.
From Publishers Weekly:
Need a quick fix on major events in American history? For readers who want the facts as opposed to the myth of Pocahontas, or who've forgotten the gist of the XYZ Affair or the year of the Montgomery bus boycott, it's all here-200 major events in American history, beginning around 40,000 B.C. with the first immigrants, and ending with "the first war of the 21st century," in Afghanistan. There is distinct attention given to women's and multicultural history (the 1848 Seneca Falls convention on women's rights is included, as is the founding of the NAACP). The entries range from one to three pages (a little too brief sometimes-e.g., the entry on the Domino Theory doesn't fully explain the significance of its analogy). But Axelrod, author of 60 books (including the four-volume Encyclopedia of the American West) provides the basic facts and a bit of context, explaining, for instance, the radical nature of the Homestead Act and the divisiveness created by the Rosenberg case. This is a handy reference book that, with its chronological organization, is easy to use.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.