Biography-Memoir History

Review: James Madison and the Making of America

James Madison and the Making of America James Madison and the Making of America by Kevin R.C. Gutzman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

James Madison was a genius. He was the main crafter of the United States Constitution and its main defender/expositor in the Federalist Papers. He saw human and governmental problems more deeply than anyone else in his era. We have him to thank for our world’s embrace of democracy and self-government.

Nonetheless, he might not succeed as a politician in the television era. He was small and had a soft voice. He had aristocratic tendencies. He was exceedingly bookish. As such, his biography focuses on the traits of the mind instead of activities. Whereas most of the Founding Fathers had exciting lives, Madison lived as an idealistic and bookish man. His biography then reads more like a ledger of government than like an exciting life.

Gutzman does a decent job of this. Almost all of the tedium is due to Madison’s tediousness and not the author’s weaknesses. It’s fun to swap reasons with Madison. It’s fun to reflect how American history has gone back-and-forth on the principles which governed Madison’s life. His life was governed by a cerebral approach, and this book makes his logic clear.

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