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Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years
[edit]Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years is the first two of six volumes from Carl Sandburg's six volume series on 16th president Abraham Lincoln. The two volumes cover Lincoln's the early years of Lincolns life, to when he was leaving Springfield to Washington in 1861. Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years were published in 1926. Thirteen years later, Sandburg published Abraham Lincoln: The War Years, which received the 1940 Pulitzer Prize for History.
Production
[edit]According to Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years Preface. Sandburg stated: "For thirty years and more I have planned to make a certain portrait of Abraham Lincoln."[1] Sandburg spent two years writing the Prairie Years. This does not account the years he spent preparing for the project Sandburg started the writing in 1924 and finished it in 1926 for publication.
Controversial Legacy
[edit]Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years suffered major backlash for its writing style. Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years had a sense of imaginary tone to it that didn't appease readers or reviewers. In a review by Harry Hansen in 1926, Henson was to fond of Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years. Henson said:
Out of the pages of this book emerges no heroic figure, no epic character, no titan towering above puny men. This is the book of the railsplitter, of the country storekeeper, the young lawyer, the frontier advocate, the practical backwoods politician.... The danger to the Lincoln legend was not from those who tried to make him less than he was; it came from those who were erecting him into a god of the new Augustan age of Page American commercial expansion. Lincoln was a human being of contradictions, faults and qualities.[2]
With its succeeding Volumes, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years may have had so much source material that it wasn't considered history or biography. A major controversy was that Sandburg did not cite any of work, nor did he insert a Bibliography. In the first Volume of the Prairie Years and the War Years, the preface includes very brief explanations on his sources. In the War Years, Sandburg stated in the Preface, that "There are in this book a number of hitherto unpublished or uncollected items of Lincoln's utterance, but the writer has not taken the time to compute their number."[3]
Abridgements
[edit]In 1929, just three years after the Publication of Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, Sandburg publsihed an Abridgment to The Prairie Years. It is in a different format thus not being a true abridgement.
In 1954, Sandburg publsihed a one volume version of The Prairie Years and War Years. In this abridgement, near the end of the book, Sandburg inserts a "Sources and Acknowledgments." Here he explained the sources he used in a scholarly manner.