HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Search Site
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Ardent Spirits: The Rise And Fall Of…
Loading...

Ardent Spirits: The Rise And Fall Of Prohibition (original 1973; edition 1993)

by John Kobler (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
401621,331 (3.5)3
I honestly expected more from this book. There is surely a lot of material, a great many little info covering some three hundred years of history. Still, it fails to give a complete portrait of the era... of any era, actually.

I've read quite a few books on Prohibition, and this is the one that starts further back in history. You can say that it starts right back when the United State were born. It relates American behaviours in fact of liquor in those early days, how people acted, what people believed, what they suffered because of alcohol. It traces the first laws prohibiting the sale of alcohol to Indians back in the XVIII century. No other book I read started that far.
But even in these early chapters appears what it will be the main attitude of this book: not a social history. Not the history of people living an era, shaping it and being shaped by it. But a series of anecdotes, some of which very gossipy, that never creates a picture of the whole.

More than half of the book concerns itself with everything that came before Prohibition. First of all, the numerous temperance societies that flourished in the XIX century, although they're never placed inside the society which produced them, so that they feel kind of isolated, as if they lived on a separate level than ordinary people. The author often just focuses on personalities, the weirdest, the better. He relates strange courses of life, weird carriers or attitude, questionable information about well known characters. Never does he place these people in context.
As a reader, I had a very hard time figuring out how these people stood inside their time and place, how much they were expression of a general feeling, how much they were just weird characters. Even trying to connect the lives of people living in the same period, I was never able to built a comprehensive image of the time.

The part regarding Prohibition proper was even worse. Here, we still have a few portrays of prominent people, but the exposition becomes even more sketchy. The author drops the chronological movement of the story - which had given some order to the first part - and arranges chapters in a thematic way, which - for me at least - was even more confusing, because you lose every possible reference.
Personalities are portrayed with even less attention, never are they put in context. Historical facts are barely related. There is no sense of how it was to live in that period, nor how life and attitudes changed over the thirteen years of Prohibition. If I hadn't read other books on the subject, I'd have no idea why at a certain point the idea of repeal became popular. The reasons that made repeal possible are very swiftly - and in my opinion, very inadequately - covered.

Maybe it was my fault to expect more of a social history form this book. There are, it's true, a lot of fun information about the subject, but personally, I don't think this is what makes history friendly to read. ( )
  JazzFeathers | Jul 27, 2016 |
I honestly expected more from this book. There is surely a lot of material, a great many little info covering some three hundred years of history. Still, it fails to give a complete portrait of the era... of any era, actually.

I've read quite a few books on Prohibition, and this is the one that starts further back in history. You can say that it starts right back when the United State were born. It relates American behaviours in fact of liquor in those early days, how people acted, what people believed, what they suffered because of alcohol. It traces the first laws prohibiting the sale of alcohol to Indians back in the XVIII century. No other book I read started that far.
But even in these early chapters appears what it will be the main attitude of this book: not a social history. Not the history of people living an era, shaping it and being shaped by it. But a series of anecdotes, some of which very gossipy, that never creates a picture of the whole.

More than half of the book concerns itself with everything that came before Prohibition. First of all, the numerous temperance societies that flourished in the XIX century, although they're never placed inside the society which produced them, so that they feel kind of isolated, as if they lived on a separate level than ordinary people. The author often just focuses on personalities, the weirdest, the better. He relates strange courses of life, weird carriers or attitude, questionable information about well known characters. Never does he place these people in context.
As a reader, I had a very hard time figuring out how these people stood inside their time and place, how much they were expression of a general feeling, how much they were just weird characters. Even trying to connect the lives of people living in the same period, I was never able to built a comprehensive image of the time.

The part regarding Prohibition proper was even worse. Here, we still have a few portrays of prominent people, but the exposition becomes even more sketchy. The author drops the chronological movement of the story - which had given some order to the first part - and arranges chapters in a thematic way, which - for me at least - was even more confusing, because you lose every possible reference.
Personalities are portrayed with even less attention, never are they put in context. Historical facts are barely related. There is no sense of how it was to live in that period, nor how life and attitudes changed over the thirteen years of Prohibition. If I hadn't read other books on the subject, I'd have no idea why at a certain point the idea of repeal became popular. The reasons that made repeal possible are very swiftly - and in my opinion, very inadequately - covered.

Maybe it was my fault to expect more of a social history form this book. There are, it's true, a lot of fun information about the subject, but personally, I don't think this is what makes history friendly to read. ( )
  JazzFeathers | Jul 27, 2016 |

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (3.5)
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3 2
3.5
4 2
4.5
5

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 204,447,209 books! | Top bar: Always visible