David S Reynolds Popular Books

David S Reynolds Biography & Facts

David S. Reynolds (born 1948) is an American literary critic, biographer, and historian who has written about American literature and culture. He is the author or editor of fifteen books, on the Civil War era—including figures such as Walt Whitman, Abraham Lincoln, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Emily Dickinson, Harriet Beecher Stowe, George Lippard, and John Brown. Reynolds has been awarded the Bancroft Prize, the Lincoln Prize, the Christian Gauss Award, the Ambassador Book Award, the Gustavus Myers Book Award, the John Hope Franklin Prize (Honorable Mention), and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. He is a regular reviewer for The New York Times Book Review. Early life and education Reynolds was born in Providence, Rhode Island on August 30, 1948, and was raised nearby in Barrington, located near Narragansett Bay. He attended the Moses Brown School and the Providence Country Day School before moving on to Amherst College, where he received a B. A. in 1970. After teaching high school English at the Providence Country Day School for a year, he pursued his graduate studies in American literature and American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, where he was awarded his Ph.D. in 1979. Teaching career Reynolds has taught American literature and American Studies at Northwestern University, Barnard College, Rutgers University-Camden, New York University, Baruch College, and the Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris III. Since 2006, he has been a Distinguished Professor at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Writings and influence Cultural Biography Reynolds is a proponent of cultural biography, contextualizing historical figures in their era. He was influenced by the "representative men" theory of Ralph Waldo Emerson, who writes, "the ideas of the time are in the air, and infect all who breathe it… We learn of our contemporaries what they know without effort, and almost through the pores of our skin." In Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times Reynolds challenges the usual view of Lincoln as the quintessential self-made man who arose, without education or guidance, from a crude background and a barren American culture that offered few nurturing materials. Instead, Reynolds shows, Lincoln learned a lot from a rich, teeming cultural environment that he absorbed and rechanneled in his brilliant presidency and his immortal speeches. Reynolds argues in John Brown, Abolitionist that Brown was not an isolated, crazed antislavery terrorist but rather an amalgam of social currents—religious, racial, reformist, political—that found explosive realization in him. In Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography, Reynolds takes seriously Whitman's declarations that he was "the age transfigured" and that "in estimating my volumes, the world's current times and deeds, and their spirit, must first be profoundly estimated." Reynolds writes that Whitman's growing alarm over political controversies, corruption, and class division led him to try to heal his nation through his poetry, which absorbed images from many aspects of social and cultural life, including religion, science, city life, theater, oratory, photography, painting, reform movements, and sexual mores. American history Reynolds highlights the intersection of politics and culture consistent with Abraham Lincoln's view that "public sentiment is everything... he who moulds public sentiment, goes deeper than he who enacts statutes or pronounces decisions." In books like John Brown: Abolitionist, Mightier than the Sword: Uncle Tom's Cabin and the Battle for America, and Waking Giant: America in the Age of Jackson, Reynolds tells the story of political and social leaders, artists, musicians, reformers, scientists, artists, ministers, and self-styled religious prophets who shaped American history. In Mightier than the Sword: Uncle Tom's Cabin and the Battle for America, he traces the impact of Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 best-seller Uncle Tom's Cabin on the rise of Lincoln, the American Civil War, and worldwide events, including the end of serfdom in Russia, down to its influence on race relations and popular culture in the twentieth century. Literary criticism Reynolds challenges the once-prevalent view—introduced by the New Critics and later promoted by the deconstructionists and other theorists—that literature is divorced from the author's life and contexts. His reconstruction of the cultural and social contexts of literature began with his book Faith in Fiction: The Emergence of Religious Literature in America, which explores some 250 writers from Puritan times through the late 19th century. In Beneath the American Renaissance: The Subversive Imagination in the Age of Emerson and Melville, Reynolds leverages the title of F.O. Matthiessen's best known work and expands his thesis. Here Reynolds combines elements of New Historicism and cultural studies with archival research to show that great literature is characterized by its radical openness to biographical, political, social, and cultural images, which certain responsive writers adopted and transformed, yielding such symbols as Melville's white whale, Hawthorne's scarlet letter, Poe's raven, and Whitman's grass leaves. Contesting the standard interpretation of America's great writers as marginal figures in a sentimental, proper society, Reynolds reveals that they were instead immersed in a culture that was frequently sensational, subversive, or erotic, epitomized by popular novels about city mysteries, such as the lurid best-seller The Quaker City, or The Monks of Monk Hall by the Philadelphia writer George Lippard (the subject of two other books by Reynolds). Family Reynolds's wife, whose professional name is Suzanne Nalbantian, is a Professor of Comparative Literature at Long Island University and specializes in the interdisciplinary relationship between literature and neuroscience. Her six books include Memory in Literature: From Rousseau to Neuroscience, The Memory Process: Neuroscientific and Humanistic Perspectives (coedited with Paul M. Matthews and James B. McClelland), and Aesthetic Autobiography: From Life to Art in the Marcel Proust, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and Anais Nin. Awards and honors Bancroft Prize, for Walt Whitman's America Lincoln Prize, for Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times Top Ten Books of the Year," 2020, Wall Street Journal, for Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times Ambassador Book Award, for Walt Whitman's America National Book Critics Circle Award finalist, for Walt Whitman's America Christian Gauss Award (Phi Beta Kappa Society), for Beneath the American Renaissance Gustavus Myers Book Award, for John Brown, Abolitionist Kansas Notable Book, for John Brown, Abolitionist Notable Books of the Year, The New York Times Book Review, for Beneath the American Renaissance, Walt Whitman's America, and Waking Giant: America in the Age of Jackson Best Bo.... Discover the David S Reynolds popular books. Find the top 100 most popular David S Reynolds books.

Best Seller David S Reynolds Books of 2024

  • A War Imagined synopsis, comments

    A War Imagined

    Samuel Hynes

    Between the opulent Edwardian years and the 1920s the First World War opens like a gap in time. England after the war was a different place; the arts were different; history was di...

  • A Celebration of Beatrix Potter synopsis, comments

    A Celebration of Beatrix Potter

    Beatrix Potter

    2016 marks the 150th birthday of Beatrix Potter, making it the perfect time to pay tribute to the beloved author/illustrator with A Celebration of Beatrix Potter!With illustri...

  • Shiny and New synopsis, comments

    Shiny and New

    Dylan Jones

    'A wholly successful endeavour carried along by waves of infectious enthusiasm' Mojo'Fascinating' New StatesmanThe '80s were about big ideas writ large new money, new style, gende...

  • The Peter Lawford Story synopsis, comments

    The Peter Lawford Story

    Patricia Lawford Stewart & Ted Schwarz

    As the brother in law to JFK and a member of the Rat Pack, Peter Lawford was one of America's most acclaimed movie stars.Lawford led an extraordinary life. His story, as told by th...

  • Hour of the Hunter synopsis, comments

    Hour of the Hunter

    J. A. Jance

    The hunter is free to kill again and hour by hour, he draws closer . . .The brilliant psychopath Andrew Carlisle spent only six years in prison for the brutal torture–murder of a ...

  • John Brown, Abolitionist synopsis, comments

    John Brown, Abolitionist

    David S. Reynolds

    An authoritative new examination of John Brown and his deep impact on American history.Bancroft Prizewinning cultural historian David S. Reynolds presents an informative and richly...

  • Above the American Renaissance synopsis, comments

    Above the American Renaissance

    Harold K. Bush & Brian Yothers

    Above the American Renaissance takes David S. Reynolds’s classic study Beneath the American Renaissance as a model and a provocation to consider how language and concepts broadly d...

  • David Paul Reynolds v. State Texas synopsis, comments

    David Paul Reynolds v. State Texas

    Supreme Court Of Utah

    Appellant was convicted of driving while intoxicated and sentenced to probation for two years and a fine of $1,500.00. The court probated $1,300.00 of the assessed fine. The Fourte...

  • Legends of N.C. State Basketball synopsis, comments

    Legends of N.C. State Basketball

    Tim Peeler & Mark Gottfried

    The fever that is college basketball on Tobacco Road started from a small outbreak in Raleigh, North Carolina, when Indiana basketball legend Everett Case became the coach at N.C. ...

  • The Good Turn synopsis, comments

    The Good Turn

    Sharna Jackson

    A thrilling, pacy adventure about friendship, bravery and reallife injustice from the awardwinning author of High Rise Mystery'For 9+ readers, this gripping, thoughtful update to t...

  • The Long Game synopsis, comments

    The Long Game

    Elena Armas

    A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERA disgraced soccer exec reluctantly enlists the help of a retired soccer star in coaching a children’s team in this smalltown love story in the vein of I...

  • Hungry Beat synopsis, comments

    Hungry Beat

    Douglas MacIntyre & Grant McPhee

    'Hungry Beat is the story of an alltoobrief era where the shortcircuiting of that industry seemed viable. But hell, the times were luminous as was the music these artists made. The...