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Citizen Tom Paine by Howard Fast
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Citizen Tom Paine (original 1943; edition 1994)

by Howard Fast (Author)

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292590,130 (3.52)12
Among Howard Fast's historical fiction, Citizen Tom Paine-one of America's all-time best-sellers-occupies a special place, for it restored to a generation of readers the vision of Paine's revolutionary passion as the authentic roots of our national beginnings. Fast gives us "a vivid picture of Paine's mode of writing, idiosyncrasies, and character-generous, nobly unselfish, moody, often dirty, frequently drunken, a revolutionist by avocation"-Library Journal… (more)
Member:dharmaocean
Title:Citizen Tom Paine
Authors:Howard Fast (Author)
Info:Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press (1994), Edition: 1st Evergreen Ed, 341 pages
Collections:Your library, Read but unowned
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Citizen Tom Paine by Howard Fast (1943)

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Kudos to Howard Fast. If you want to know about Tom Paine and his part in the American Revolution (and Thomas Jefferson's 'Declaration of Independence') you gotta read this book. What a great read! Paine had problems (who doesn't??) but he was able to activate the run-of-the-mill American Colonist to fight for his rights to self-representation and freedom of religion like few others before (or since). If you can get 'Common Sense,' and 'The Rights of Man,' to read in conjunction with this 'fictional' biography, you will be very much enlightened regarding the American Revolution and its development from 1776 until today. ( )
1 vote Farree | Mar 30, 2018 |
I rated this at the top of my list for best fiction read in 2017.

It's billed as a novel, but I wonder if today it might be classified as creative nonfiction. My impression is that it closely follows historical accounts both in the 18th-century revolutionary settings and in the biography of Thomas Paine, and that the author used fictional imagination and techniques to render his character and impart drama and immediacy without disturbing the known record.

Wherever the actual line is between fact and invention, I found this an exciting, inspiring, and poignant depiction of time and place and of the one man, if there was any one man, who lit the fuse of American independence. ( )
1 vote Meredy | Dec 28, 2017 |
The complete story of the life of Thomas Paine. Yes that Tom Paine, the author of the pamphlet titles 'Common Sense'. The work that move the American Revolution forward. Howard Fast tells the story with a vivid picture as if we were right in the room with Mr. Paine. You can feel the hurt in his fingers , smell the filth of the squalor he lived much of his life. If you read Howard Fast's details you will have a very different perspective on the trials and tribulations of our fore fathers and leaders. Folks were rotten to the core. Many of our American citizens were mean, selfish, and as corrupt as the day is long. Somehow through his 72 years, Thomas Paine went to his grave writing and standing on one principle, the rights of the common man. He literally fought and gave his entire life for these rights. Maybe we need more Paine in our lives today! Thomas Paine that is!
  stanrobinson | Sep 30, 2011 |
Good book about the man who wrote "Common Sense," and was one of the key people in sparking, and sustaining to completion, the American Revolution. It's an interesting, well-written fictionalized account of the real events of Paine's life, which shows his brilliance and flaws. Rather heartbreaking in parts. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in this historical period. ( )
  herebedragons | May 31, 2010 |
A dramatic and enlightening account of the most radical of radicals of America's founders. His liberatarian ideas are dutifully ignored by modern conservatives. ( )
  JBreedlove | Aug 8, 2006 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Howard Fastprimary authorall editionscalculated
Andres, Charles J.Illustratorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
There is nothing more common than to confound the terms of American Revolution with those of the late American War.  The American war is over, but this is far from being the case with the American revolution.  On the contrary, nothing but the first act of the great drama is closed. -Benjamin Rush, 1787.
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On a cool, pleasant early fall morning, in the year 1774, Dr. Benjamin Franklin was told that Thomas Paine had been waiting to see him for almost an hour.
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Among Howard Fast's historical fiction, Citizen Tom Paine-one of America's all-time best-sellers-occupies a special place, for it restored to a generation of readers the vision of Paine's revolutionary passion as the authentic roots of our national beginnings. Fast gives us "a vivid picture of Paine's mode of writing, idiosyncrasies, and character-generous, nobly unselfish, moody, often dirty, frequently drunken, a revolutionist by avocation"-Library Journal

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