Jill Lepore is an associate professor of history at Boston University. She is the author of The Name of War: King
Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity, which won the Bancroft Prize, Phi Beta Kappa's Ralph Waldo Emerson
Award, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians' Book Prize, and the New England Historical Association's Book
Award. She is cofounder and coeditor of the Web magazine Common-place (www.common-place.org), and lives in Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Review
"Engaging.... Deftly evokes a rich and colorful tradition, the American as inventor, unifier, optimist
and idealist."
--Newsday
"Remarkable.... I read it at one sitting, mesmerized by the scholarship, the erudition and the elegant simplicity
of this story of seven consummately noble American lives, each one of them, as Jill Lepore reveals, a pilgrimage
in the grand search for a nation-creating linguistic ideal."
--Simon Winchester, author of The Professor and the Madman
"Wonderfully engrossing."
--Boston Globe
"Lepore is a terrific storyteller, alert to trenchant details but also able to convey the connections between
events, the sweep of an epoch."
--The New York Times Book Review
"This is a book to ponder and re-leaf and return to."
--Times Literary Supplement
"A great read."
--Chicago Tribune
"Eloquent... Smart and suggestive... Readers will enjoy an intriguing journey filled with many small gems
of understanding."
--The New Republic
"Insightful and engaging.... Lepore's handling of [these men's] distinctive careers gives them the place they
deserve in the national consciousness."
--St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"Lepore's fresh work is suggestive of new ways of imagining what unites and divides us, what binds us to this
earth."
--Raleigh News & Observer
"Entertaining... a charming book about the quirky origins of some influential early American inventions."
--The Washington Times
Random House, Inc. Web Site, May, 2003
Summary
What ties Americans to one another? What unifies a nation of citizens with different racial, religious and ethnic
backgrounds? These were the dilemmas faced by Americans in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as they sought
ways to bind the newly United States together.
In A is for American, award-winning historian Jill Lepore portrays seven men who turned to language to help shape
a new nation's character and boundaries. From Noah Webster's attempts to standardize American spelling, to Alexander
Graham Bell's use of "Visible Speech" to help teach the deaf to talk, to Sequoyah's development of a
Cherokee syllabary as a means of preserving his people's independence, these stories form a compelling portrait
of a developing nation's struggles. Lepore brilliantly explores the personalities, work, and influence of these
figures, seven men driven by radically different aims and temperaments. Through these superbly told stories, she
chronicles the challenges faced by a young country trying to unify its diverse people.