The American Revolution Books
An extremely readable, entertaining account of the war's beginning.
A highly acclaimed work of history that studies a specific part of the world (Virginia) during the Revolution but offers some very intriguing re-interpretations of how seemingly powerless groups like poor white farmers, slaves, and Native Americans all had pivotal influence on the gentry's decision to lead the charge for independence.
An examination of the Revolution through women's perspectives as Kerber thoroughly researched them in diaries, letters, and legal records.
Another Pulitzer Prize winner, and a very accessible and engaging account of the pivotal year of independence, from multiple perspectives.
A fantastic narrative history of the conflict from a preeminent historian.
A Pulitzer-Prize winning book from one of the Revolution's biggest fans. Wood argues that America's was indeed a radical Revolution, within its context. The book seeks to couch the events of the 1760s and '70s (and thereafter) in a much broader political, social, and cultural context so that you can understand what the Western world was like before, during, and after the American war for independence.