Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 168
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7425-3752-1 • Hardback • April 2009 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-0-7425-6655-2 • eBook • April 2009 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Lester D. Langley is research professor emeritus at the University of Georgia.
A Simón Bolívar Chronology
Chapter 1: The Preparation
Chapter 2: The Rebel
Chapter 3: The Revolutionary
Chapter 4: The Liberator
Chapter 5: The Victor
Epilogue
Bibliographical Note
Lester Langley’s succinct Simón Bolívar: Venezuelan Rebel, American Revolutionary fills a gap in both the historiography and the marketplace. . . . The work reads well for Langley’s intended audience of undergraduates and general readers. The chronological organization allows Langley to assess the broad outline of Bolívar’s life in an easily accessible way. . . . Bolívar, like Thomas Jefferson, remains enigmatic. Langley’s biography clarifies the mystery a little, and places Bolívar firmly where he belongs, in the pantheon of American (hemispherically speaking) heroes.
— Journal Of Historical Biography
Langley moves Simón Bolívar to the center stage of ‘American' politics in this masterful biography, which ranges from the eighteenth-century stage of Enlightenment philosophy to the twenty-first century of Venezuela under Hugo Chávez, one of the Liberator's greatest admirers. This is vintage Langley and an essential read if you are interested in the political, social, and intellectual milieu of modern Latin America.
— Lawrence A. Clayton, University of Alabama
Accessible and insightful. Langley's perspective on the South American Liberator offers a clear view of the details of Simón Bolívar’s life and remarkable historical trajectory within a broad view of the contemporaneous historical context in the United States, Europe, and South America. Balanced and well informed, this book will be a highly satisfying experience for all those curious about this exceptional moment and this charismatic figure in South American history.
— John V. Lombardi, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Explains how and why Bolívar was the most relevant figure in the pantheon of leaders in the 1775–1825 revolutionary age in the Americas
Provides a profile of Bolívar the rebel and explains how and why he became a revolutionary
Compares Bolívar to George Washington, not in the traditional manner of focusing solely on their military accomplishments but on their character and the way each man waged war
Emphasizes and places in context Bolívar's controversial decision to use slave and colored troops, enabling him to achieve victory but creating turmoil among his allies and some U.S. officials
Details how the war in the Bolivarian theatre (Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia) and Bolívar's style of warfare had a powerful impact on contemporary U.S. officials in the critical decade between 1815 and 1825
Explains Bolívar's relevance in Venezuelan (and hemispheric) history and why the Bolivarian cult has persisted into the twenty-first century