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Being George Washington: The Indispensable Man, as You've Never Seen Him Hardcover – November 22, 2011

4.6 out of 5 stars 770 ratings

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#1 New York Times bestselling author and nationally syndicated radio host Glenn Beck puts his unique spin on the life and legacy of Founding Father George Washington.

IF YOU THINK YOU KNOW GEORGE WASHINGTON, THINK AGAIN.

This is the amazing true story of a real-life superhero who wore no cape and possessed no special powers—yet changed the world forever. It’s a story about a man whose life reads as if it were torn from the pages of an action novel: Bullet holes through his clothing. Horses shot out from under him. Unimaginable hardship. Disease. Heroism. Spies and double-agents. And, of course, the unmistakable hand of Divine Providence that guided it all.

Being George Washington is a whole new way to look at history. You won’t simply read about the awful winter spent at Valley Forge—you’ll live it right alongside Washington. You’ll be on the boat with him crossing the Delaware, in the trenches with him at Yorktown, and standing next to him at the Constitutional Convention as a new republic is finally born.

Through these stories you’ll not only learn our real history (and how it applies to today), you’ll also see how the media and others have distorted our view of it. It’s ironic that the best-known fact about George Washington—that he chopped down a cherry tree—is a complete lie. It’s even more ironic when you consider that a lie was thought necessary to prove he could not tell one.

For all of his heroism and triumphs, Washington’s single greatest accomplishment was the man he created in the process: courageous and principled, fair and just, respectful to all. But he was also something else: flawed.

It’s those flaws that should give us hope for today. After all, if Washington had been perfect, then there would be no way to build another one. That’s why this book is not just about being George Washington in 1776, it’s about the struggle to be him every single day of our lives. Understanding the way he turned himself from an uneducated farmer into the Indispensable (yet imperfect) Man, is the only way to build a new generation of George Washingtons that can take on the extraordinary challenges that America is once again facing.
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Glenn Beck, the nationally syndicated radio host and founder of TheBlaze television network, has written thirteen #1 bestselling books and is one of the few authors in history to have had #1 national bestsellers in the fiction, nonfiction, self-help, and children’s picture book genres. His recent fiction works include the thrillers Agenda 21, The Overton Window, and its sequel, The Eye of Moloch; his many nonfiction titles include Conform, Miracles and Massacres, Control, and Being George Washington. For more information about Glenn Beck, his books, and TheBlaze television network, visit GlennBeck.com and TheBlaze.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Being George Washington

1

Victory or Death


Friday, December 13, 1776
The Widow White’s Tavern
Basking Ridge, New Jersey

It required a very special manner of general to have a tranquil breakfast in the middle of a war in which his own side confronted massive peril.

But Charles Lee was that sort of general—and man.

The torch of freedom, shining so brightly following General William Howe’s evacuation of Boston, was now threatened with darkness. New York City had, in battle after battle, been ingloriously lost. Even the outpost named for Lee himself—New Jersey’s “Fort Lee”—had been abandoned. Philadelphia seemed next. Thousands of rebel soldiers had been lost, either slain in battle or now bound in heavy iron chains. Thousands more had simply vanished and gone home.

It was mid-morning, nearing ten o’clock, yet General Lee sat quietly in his soiled, rumpled cap and dressing gown, here at the widow Mary White’s two-storied, two-chimneyed tavern in Basking Ridge, New Jersey. The slovenly Lee cheerfully munched upon his eggs and hard bread and plentiful portions of bacon and ham, occasionally pausing to fling a scrap or two of what had recently been ambulatory swine to the ravenous pack of faithful hounds who seemingly accompanied this strange man wherever he traveled. Between munches and flings, Lee took quill
pen in hand to inscribe a letter to General Horatio Gates furiously raging against their mutual superior, George Washington. “A certain man,” Lee scribbled hurriedly, “is damnably deficient.”

Lee wrote rapidly for a very good reason: All hell was breaking loose. To enjoy this breakfast (and perhaps more of the company of the tavern’s comely ladies), Lee had foolishly separated himself from his troops—troops he had long delayed bringing southward from New York state to reinforce Washington’s woefully depleted forces. Troops that were now busily heading for a semblance of safety across the ice-choked Delaware River in Pennsylvania. Only a handful of guards had accompanied Lee and his aide to the widow White’s tavern.

“You’re surrounded, you traitor, Lee!” came a shout from outside. “Surrender or forfeit your worthless life!” The startled Lee finished writing his last sentence, breaking his quill point as he did, and sprang from his seat. Falling to his knees, he peered out from the bottom of a nearby sill to view a squad of green-jacketed British dragoons, their muskets at the ready.

Lee could not be sure which one had shouted, but that was the least of his problems.

It was, in fact, twenty-two-year-old Cornet Banastre Tarleton, among the most capable and vicious men fighting under the Union Jack. Lee bolted from his table and scurried for safety just as the hard-faced Tarleton’s men unleashed a cascade of fire. Smoke and deafening thunder—and lead shot—filled the air. Several of Lee’s guards fell dead or wounded.

“Hide here!” screamed a barmaid. “Hide in my bed!”

“I’d die first!” shouted Lee, as his hounds growled and barked and ran about the house in panic. “I will fight to the last!”

“I’ll burn the house down! To the ground!” shouted Tarleton. “You have five minutes to surrender!”

Charles Lee’s last came very soon. But it ended with neither death nor victory. Now attired in his old blue coat and battered cock hat, his breeches spattered with grease, he merely shuffled out the tavern’s front door. His captors hustled him upon a horse and sounded a bugle as Charles Lee was led away to a British camp at Brunswick.

December 1776
Trenton, New Jersey

“What’s going on?” Colonel Johann Gottlieb Rall questioned. The gruff, fifty-year-old “Hessian Lion” spoke no English. He spoke only war—and contempt for his Amerikanischen adversaries. Before him, he saw a body carried forward. Another Hessian soldier hobbled past him, assisted by two more grenadiers, blood still seeping freely from the bandages wrapped tightly just above his left knee.

“Another ambush, Colonel Rall. Corporal Schmidt killed. Shot straight through the heart. Private Keller wounded,” answered Lieutenant Andreas von Wiederholdt, who had recently begun to appear much older than his forty-four years. His soldiers could not venture a step outside this miserable village of Trenton without being fired upon by these rebel madmen. Even being within its limits offered little safety. A shot from the woods—blam!—might be fired into the back of an unsuspecting sentry patrolling Trenton’s outskirts. And what could anyone hope to do about it?

Wiederholdt and his men could no longer rest decently at night. They remained on constant alert, fitfully sleeping in their blue-and-black uniforms, ready to spring into action at a moment’s notice and confront a patriot’s musket. The darkening bags under Wiederholdt’s eyes and the disheveled nature of his own once invariably neat, brass-buttoned uniform revealed that.

A column of men appeared on the horizon, on the road leading northward out of the town, but they were too far away to clearly identify. Was it the Americans? Daring to attack us directly? Wiederholdt’s bony face froze in fear. But now he noticed something—shafts of reflected sunlight danced about the head of each figure advancing toward him, emanating from the tall, pointed, polished brass helmet that each Hessian grenadier so proudly wore. It was, Wiederholdt now saw, merely Lieutenant Jakob Piel’s company trudging home from a fourteen-mile march to the British outpost at Princeton. A small, very relieved smile played across his thin lips.

Rall could not but help notice Wiederholdt’s cascading emotions.
“Ha!” he joked to his subordinate. “You see Americans everywhere! Are you a soldier or an old woman?”

Wiederholdt silently accepted the insult. Who is Rall bluffing? he thought. He knows what’s going on; that it’s unsafe for messengers—or anyone—out there. These Americans hate us. They see us as invaders—oppressors. That’s why we have to send a hundred troops to guard a single messenger to Princeton!

But Wiederholdt was not about to maintain his silence about everything. “Colonel Rall,” he said deferentially, hoping not to agitate his commandant too much, “perhaps we should now move to fortify Trenton. I know Colonel von Donop has recommended erecting redoubts on both the upper end of town and along the river.”

“Donop!” snapped Rall. “Dummkopf! Let the Americans come! So much the better! If they dare to come we will have at them with our bayonets—and that will be the end of George Washington!”

December 1776
(George Washington’s headquarters)
Outside the farmhouse of Robert Merrick
Ten miles north of Trenton Falls
Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Perhaps it would be the end of George Washington—and of his revolution.

Colonel Rall certainly thought Washington was on the ropes.

General Lee had thought so as well.

And so, though he hated to admit it, did Thomas Paine.

It was no comfortable Philadelphia print shop in which Paine now sat. Patriotism meant more than words to the English-born pamphleteer. At forty, he now wore the short brown jacket and feathered hat of his unit of the Philadelphia Associators militia, “The Flying Camp.”

Since August, Washington had done nothing but retreat. But while so many others had fled (only two days earlier he had been among those ordered to evacuate Fort Lee), Paine had remained and now, by flickering campfire light, employing the taut calfskin of a Continental Army drumhead as his desk, he scratched out the words of a new pamphlet. Hard
circumstances demanded hard truths. Events mandated a call to action worthy of a sounding trumpet.

Normally, Tom Paine wrote slowly and painfully—but that was a luxury he could no longer afford. He paused—but only for his smallish hand to dip a sharpened quill once more into the blackness of his pewter inkpot. His piercing blue eyes ablaze, he rapidly composed word after word in the fine penmanship he had learned as a boy in England. Before long he’d completed his task.

“My good man! Come here!” Paine demanded of an army courier, a rough-hewn frontiersman from the Pennsylvania backwoods who was mounted atop a horse that looked like it had served with its rider in the French and Indian War. “I’m Thomas Paine. I hear you are bound for Philadelphia, to the Continental Congress.”

The courier stared blankly at Paine, who seemed a tad too excited for his tastes. He said nothing, but his horse flicked its tail—more out of habit than anything else. It was now too cold for flies—or any other sort of insect.

“Well, man? What is it?” Paine demanded, drawing out each syllable so this dimwit before him might better understand his simple question.

“Aye,” came the answer in a harsh Scotch-Irish brogue, “Philadelphia.”

“I mean to ride with you, soldier. I need to return to my print shop. To have something printed of importance to our cause. How fast can you ride?”

The messenger eyed Paine with contempt. “Fast enough for General Washington, sir,” he answered. He was clearly annoyed by this Paine fellow, whoever he was.

But Tom Paine didn’t care whom he offended. He wanted his words printed—while there was still an army to read them to.

December 1776
Merrick farmhouse

“Any word yet from General Gates?” General Washington asked.

Washington had entreated Horatio Gates to join his forces, but Gates pled that he was simply too ill to travel. Like Charles Lee, he seemed
strangely reluctant to meet with his commander—or to follow simple orders.

“No, General,” came a voice from the back of the room. It belonged to another general. “But, enough of Gates. We have plenty of business before us, and I must repeat what I said yesterday: we must retreat to Philadelphia to safeguard our capital and our Congress. The very existence of our government is at stake. And besides that, we have suffered the capture of so many—not to mention the thousands more whose enlistments have expired and have simply gone home. Two thousand from Maryland and New Jersey alone! And who knows how many more have simply deserted our cause? We must safeguard Philadelphia at all costs.”

Silence filled the room, which was crowded with the Continental Army’s senior staff.

George Washington was often slow to speak. Now, in this very crucial moment, he again paused before answering. Was he simply composing his thoughts? About to agree, or disagree with this unpalatable proposition? Or was he waiting, as he often did, for as many officers who so wanted to speak freely?

No one said a word.

Nathanael Greene might have been one to speak up, but his recent counsel to hold Fort Washington in upper Manhattan had proven so disastrous that he hesitated to offer any advice at that moment. It would take a while for the marvelously capable Rhode Islander to regain his confidence, so on this morning Greene merely shifted his feet and kept his gaze downward.

A young artillery officer, Alexander Hamilton, as slight and delicate as a fifteen-year-old regimental fifer, but as hardened as any grizzled veteran of Fort Necessity, stood, arms folded, his back stiffening in barely controlled rage. But it was not for twenty-two-year-old captains to publicly upbraid generals. So he, too, kept his silence.

The normally jovial Henry Knox’s puffy eyes narrowed in anger. If Knox could have marshaled his 280-pound frame to crush this defeatist, he would have gladly done so right then and there. But, as even his many friends would have conceded, General Knox’s ample body contained nary an ounce of actual muscle. Nay, if Henry Knox were to dispatch him, it would have to be by sitting upon the old faker and suffocating him.

Knox gave the idea of retreating to Philadelphia some thought. He was about to set off his booming voice when Washington instead began to speak.

“General,” Washington said, his tone measured but firm, his words addressed to his questioner, “our soldiers take their leave because we retreat. Men enlist for victory, not humiliation. We must, even in this hour of peril—no, particularly in this hour of gravest peril—provide our men with the taste of victory to feed their hungry souls. And I speak not merely about the men under arms but of an entire continent of patriots.

“The enemy has spread his forces thin. They should be pursuing us—building boats and bridges and moving to crush us in our weakness. But, no, instead they rest. We must not rest. We must strike. We have the boats to move back victoriously across the Delaware, just as we once ingloriously fled the other way.

“We must strike! Now!”

“Yes, General,” came the response of yet another general, another senior officer skilled in the art of disguising inaction in the more fashionable garments of logic and reason. “But where would we strike? How? When? Against what units of the enemy? And what do we really know of their encampments and habits? Grand strategies must be grounded in hard intelligence—or they are no procession toward triumphal monuments and arches, but rather to our gravestones.”

Washington began to ponder that point, when suddenly a hard rapping noise at the door broke the silence. A guard announced that a visitor was demanding to see General Washington at once. He could not wait, he said—and he had to see the general alone.

It was all highly irregular, of course, but something told Washington that he should indeed confer with this mysterious visitor.

He abruptly broke off his council of war, letting his critics, all puffed up with fine excuses for retreat, own the last word. When all had departed, Washington sat alone, awaiting this stranger and whatever it was that he might have to convey.

A man, rough-hewn but stout, gingerly dared to enter.

“You demand my time,” Washington instantly challenged him, catching him off guard. “State your name and purpose.”

“I, sir, am John Honeyman,” the man answered in the burr of his
native Scotland. “I am a farmer from near to Trenton, and I sell my vegetables to the Hessians stationed in the town. They pay good money—”

“We pay in continental scrip, if you are here to peddle us your wares,” Washington cut him off.

“They pay good money,” Honeyman continued, “but they work for our British oppressors, and I hate them. Neither gold guineas nor Spanish dollars can buy my love for them!”

The glint in Washington’s eyes conveyed the pleasure he felt in those words, a secret satisfaction his ever-guarded lips dared not betray.

Honeyman now reached his point.

“I sell my wares. I take my oxcart to Trenton. I see everything—and I remember everything, sir. I can draw you a fine map. I can tell you where each man is stationed. The very position of each cannon. The hour at which their guards are changed—that there are no fortifications. I can even tell you when their Colonel Rall arises. He is quite the late riser, you know—or you may not know that. Such is what I have to sell to you today, General Washington.”

“Mr. Honeyman,” Washington replied, as he extended a chair to this burly gift from the gods of war and fortune, “please, take a seat. We have much to discuss . . .”

December 1776
Peter Cochrane House
Brunswick, New Jersey

Charles Lee was not alone. Held captive in a room as disheveled as himself, he was in a long, low house where, just months before, patriots had proudly proclaimed the Declaration of Independence. He was continuously guarded by two unsmiling and silent Hessian sentries. They were silent, however, for good reason—neither spoke a word of English.

Lee was down, but he was hardly out. He still had cards to play, and as long as the British didn’t first hang him as a deserter and a traitor to the Crown, he intended to play every single one of them.

“Captain!” He bolted from his chair, bellowing to a man who stood just outside the door. “Captain Münchhausen, how many times must
I ask you? I need to speak to General Howe. I demand to speak with General Howe—I wish to tell him how the rebels can be beaten. I know Washington! I know his tricks.”

Captain Friedrich von Münchhausen, General Howe’s reserved Hessian adjutant, merely turned away in disgust, bounding over a snowbank and onto Brunswick’s Queen Street.

“Is he at it again?” The voice belonged to Cornet Banastre Tarleton, the dragoon who had captured Lee not long before.

Münchhausen nodded in disgust.

“Lee is as perfect in treachery as if he were American born,” Tarleton marveled. “They swallow their allegiance to both king and Congress alternately with as much ease as you swallow poached eggs!” With that he roared back in high-pitched laughter. Of all spoken and written humor, Tarleton valued his own the most.

Münchhausen, however, valued it less. He was not particularly amused at Tarleton’s current jest. Besides, if he were to expend any energy laughing at an Englishman’s jokes, it would be at General William Howe’s.

“Is it too late,” Münchhausen turned the question on Tarleton, “to send this schwein back to the rebels? A man of his character will do much more harm to them when he is on their side than he can on ours.”

Unlike Cornet Tarleton, Captain Münchhausen wasn’t joking.

December 24, 1776
Merrick farmhouse

George Washington had no time for rest, not even on Christmas—particularly not on this Christmas Eve.

He sat at his table. On a small scrap of paper, he scribbled the briefest of notes to a staff member. He repeated the process, again and again.

Dr. Benjamin Rush eyed this scene contemptuously. Rush, now a surgeon with Washington’s army, was a member of the Continental Congress. Only a few months before he had boldly signed the Declaration of Independence, but now he feared that George Washington was squandering any chance that America’s fragile independence had to
survive. One retreat followed another. If only Horatio Gates were in charge, the doctor thought, if only Charles Lee were still a free man and in command—we would have the soldiers of the Crown on the run.

Washington arose. He nodded to Dr. Rush before leaving the room to summon a guard to deliver the brief messages he had just composed. But as Washington departed, he left one document behind. It floated to the wooden plank floor below where he had just sat.

Rush hurried to retrieve it. He might now learn a little more of what ill-conceived plans ran through this wretched Washington’s mind.

To his great disappointment, there were no detailed battle plans or grand outlines of strategy on the piece of paper that Rush now held in his hands. It contained just three words:

Victory or death.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Threshold Editions
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 22, 2011
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ First Edition
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 304 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1451659261
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1451659269
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.05 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.13 x 1.3 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 770 ratings

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Glenn Beck
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Glenn Beck, a nationally syndicated radio host and founder of TheBlaze, is the author of thirteen #1 bestselling books. Beck is also the publisher of Mercury Ink, a publishing imprint (www.mercuryink.com) that, in conjunction with Simon & Schuster, released the #1 bestselling young adult series Michael Vey.

Glenn can be found on the web at www.glennbeck.com and www.theblaze.com.

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Customers find this book engaging and well-written, particularly suitable for young adults, with valuable historical information and a focus on George Washington's character and principles. They appreciate its portrayal of Washington as a man of enormous faith and unselfish attitude, and consider it worth the investment. The book's style receives positive feedback, with one customer noting how it brings history to life. While many find it accurate, opinions about its factual content are mixed.

244 customers mention "Readability"235 positive9 negative

Customers find the book readable and enjoyable, particularly noting it is suitable for young adults.

"...This book was a pleasure to read, and pointed out both the strengths and weaknesses of Washington...." Read more

"...On top of all of this is an absolutely stellar section which tackles the Newburgh Conspiracy, a subject that was never even mentioned in any U.S...." Read more

"...Well done, Glenn Beck. You have re-awakened my interest in the greatest American who ever lived, and done it in a compelling fashion." Read more

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205 customers mention "Information quality"200 positive5 negative

Customers appreciate the book's historical content, describing it as a masterful presentation of facts and stories about George Washington.

"...This book was a pleasure to read, and pointed out both the strengths and weaknesses of Washington...." Read more

"...Any student of our history needs to read this book. It examines Washington, citing both his successes and his shortcomings, his virtues and his..." Read more

"...The book is very well-written and obviously thoroughly researched. I didn't find any historical inaccuracies nor any typos -- a rarity these days...." Read more

"...That entire section was fascinating and enthralling!..." Read more

60 customers mention "Pacing"54 positive6 negative

Customers appreciate the book's pacing, finding it well-written and easy to read, with one customer noting how the writing style brings history to life.

"...The book is very well-written and obviously thoroughly researched. I didn't find any historical inaccuracies nor any typos -- a rarity these days...." Read more

"...glean the "real" character of Washington in a more readable and approachable format, in order that we might apply those lessons to our own lives, in..." Read more

"...One reason I enjoy his books, is because he writes for the common man. He is so talented, he doesn't need 10 syllable words to get his point across...." Read more

"I enjoyed reading this book. It was easy to read and I learned a few things about the Revolutionary War and Washington that I had not heard before...." Read more

52 customers mention "Character development"52 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's portrayal of George Washington as a man of character and principal, providing a new perspective on his life.

"...It highlights the courage, honor, and humility of George Washington in ways that a mere textbook never will...." Read more

"...The greatness and unimpeachable character of George Washington, as General of the Revolutionary Army and Commander-in-Chief at age 27 cannot be..." Read more

"...to his successes and failures, he has become one of the most revered man in our history...." Read more

"...I do believe he was a remarkable man. You can't read the book without feeling there was some divine power watching over him...." Read more

28 customers mention "Value"26 positive2 negative

Customers appreciate the book's portrayal of George Washington's character, highlighting his courage, faith, and unselfish attitude, with one customer noting how hardship shaped him into a great leader.

"...nutshell Beck highlights Washington's character, trust, and honor in story after story and demonstrates how he united America around freedom so that..." Read more

"...of Washington's devotion to the cause of liberty and his enduring faith in God are a refreshing experience in an age when revisionist historians try..." Read more

"...was able to face dire situations and overcome them due of his strong sense of honor, his rectitude, his belief in a supreme guiding force to the..." Read more

"...He does make a case for principled leadership...." Read more

11 customers mention "Value for money"11 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well worth the time and money.

"...You will agree. It came quickly, package well and at a decent price. Thank you." Read more

"...What an amazing price they paid, both in money and in time, to get her going. Maybe if we remember, we can steer back to the Constitution." Read more

"...it is by Glenn Beck & everything we've read to date has been worth every star. If this proves otherwise, than I'll adjust it then." Read more

"...from those portrayed in others books on G.W. All-in-all, well worth the time and money. Thanks Glenn!" Read more

10 customers mention "Style"10 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the style of the book, finding it compelling and well-represented, with one customer noting its interesting format.

"...in the greatest American who ever lived, and done it in a compelling fashion." Read more

"...The stylistic format provided life to the scenes of Washington in the army...." Read more

"A fantastic look through critical points in the life of our most well known founding father, and a guidebook on how we of today could still be able..." Read more

"This book is an amazing look at the President that was "first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen"...." Read more

16 customers mention "Accuracy"11 positive5 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the accuracy of the book, with some finding it factual and containing many facts, while others express concerns about its thoroughness.

"...This book was accurate with many of the well document facts in other books...." Read more

"...instead of the boring history fact books they read, and it is is also accurate and not trying to change history as it really was." Read more

"...style throughout the prose of the book and it detracts from the actual information...." Read more

"If you're looking for truth, factual and well documented material to learn from, read this book...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2011
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    I was encouraged to read this book because of the gaping hole in leadership internationally, nationally, and locally - whether in politics, education, business, or in the church. Simultaneous with my reading of this book I was interested in something that John Gardner (in an essay on leadership) pointed out, "When the United States was formed, the population stood at around 3 million. That 3 million produced at least six leaders of world class--Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, and Hamilton." Today we have a population 90 times larger than that and I can't name a single leader that comes close to the aforementioned six men. Along with Gardner I ask the question "Where are they?"

    Therefore, my curiosity was piqued in reading this book to discover what we can learn from Washington's life - and whether we can truly produce great leaders today. One of the main points that Beck makes in the book early on is that "for America to achieve the greatness that George Washington achieved, we have to remember that it is achievable." In story after story Beck brings out some of the keys to great leadership - character (based on a strong faith in God and His good providence); putting others before self - especially what's best for the whole; having a vision for liberty and fighting for it; focusing on that which will last beyond us. In a nutshell Beck highlights Washington's character, trust, and honor in story after story and demonstrates how he united America around freedom so that we could be the best we could be.

    The primary lesson of this book and of great leadership is stated by Beck in this manner, "Everything we do in life--every battle that we fight and every mountain that we climb, no matter how many times we fall--may be for no other purpose than to prepare us for that moment when we are called upon to make a difference in this world...What Washington did do was accept the responsibility he had been given, beg the grace of God upon himself and his army, and then work relentlessly to accomplish his goals. What he did do was to keep on working, regardless of the personal sacrifices required or the setbacks that he encountered. He kept the faith, no matter who stood against him; regardless of the gossip, the naysayers and sometimes, regardless even of the betrayal of his friends."

    In conclusion Beck states that if you and I are to be like George Washington in today's world means:

    "a daily struggle between your heart and your brain; between instant gratification and enduring greatness."

    "looking out for our families, our neighbors, and our countrymen--standing for them when they can't stand for themselves."

    "putting country before party."

    "becoming a leader - not of a country or army, but of yourself, your community, and your own family. It means taking personal responsibility for your actions and holding those around you to the same standard."

    "accepting that this country was chosen for Divine protection because the struggle for freedom is worthy of protection."

    In other words, great leadership involves humility before God; responsibility with what He has stewarded unto us, and faithfulness to the task at hand. This book was a pleasure to read, and pointed out both the strengths and weaknesses of Washington. However, the constant reminder was to be what we can be with God's help, and do what we can do (not focus on what we can't do), one step or opportunity at a time. Being a great leader like Washington involves great sacrifice, risk, unselfishness, and tremendous dedication. In the final analysis we need to be willing to personally answer the key question that Beck asks, "Are you willing to lose everything to do what is right?" I am grateful that Washington did, hope I will too, and that his tribe will increase abundantly.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2012
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Glenn Beck has accomplished a rare feat: penning a book that contains many of the people, places, dates, and events surrounding George Washington's role in the founding of The United States, from before the Revolution to the ratification of the U.S. Constitution and beyond, without falling into a textbook style of delivery. The focus on narrative succeeds in creating a much more immersive experience than a standard textbook, and Glenn's periodic expoundings on the motives and sentiments behind George Washington's actions, rather than distract the reader, instead help to understand what it means to "be" George Washington. The frequent examples of Washington's devotion to the cause of liberty and his enduring faith in God are a refreshing experience in an age when revisionist historians try to downplay the role of Providence in our nation's history.

    On top of all of this is an absolutely stellar section which tackles the Newburgh Conspiracy, a subject that was never even mentioned in any U.S. History class I took in school (goes to show the neglect that even our public schools have shown for our own history). I had never even heard of the Newburgh Conspiracy until I read this book. Not only did Washington guide his army through the horrors of war, he also restored their faith in the republic when it was shaken after the war by a weak Congress which, thanks to the equally weak Articles of Confederation, had immense difficulty in keeping its promise to the army by paying their soldiers and providing pensions for the wounded. Washington, who so often had the support and love of his soldiers and officers, suddenly had to stand alone against them and convince them that using violence against Congress to take what their men had rightfully earned would only tarnish the glory they had obtained in throwing off tyranny. Doing so would only give rise to a new tyranny in place of the one they had just defeated. It all came down to one man giving one speech in order to save the nation from descending into anarchy, which all too often is followed by tyranny. Washington was even confronted with the idea of becoming a monarch himself, but had the courage and wisdom to turn it down, thereby shaping our history for generations to come. This part of the Revolution needs more emphasis, and I personally thank Glenn Beck for bringing it to light for me.

    Any student of our history needs to read this book. It examines Washington, citing both his successes and his shortcomings, his virtues and his flaws. It highlights the courage, honor, and humility of George Washington in ways that a mere textbook never will. It shows him for the rare type of man that he was: A great man, and a good man.
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Paul Marks
    5.0 out of 5 stars The Indispensible book on the Indispenable man.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 15, 2012
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    Glenn Beck is a passionate man. Famous (or infamous - depending one's point of view) for expressing every thought in his head (regardless of the consequences for himself) and expressing his opinions with total passion. Not a person who is known for obeying the polite dinner party rule of "avoid the subjects of politics and religion". And not someone to put personal character in a different box from political opinions or to avoid making public his judgements about people - whether it is Barack Obama, Newt Gingrich or HIMSELF (Beck, although his critics seem not to know, can be at least as harsh in his judgements of himself as he can be about other people).

    So how does the above effect this book? Oddly enough it effects if for the GOOD.

    Glenn Beck writes passionately but accurately (although his grasp of the details may owe much to the group of researchers who are listed as helping with the book), and the passionate style of Beck helps the reader understand Washington - a man who, because of his deep (very old style ENGLISH, I hope American readers will not be offended by the use of that word - but George Washington is, to some externt, like an English Gentleman of the "old school") reserve - is very hard to get close to. What Beck does is take the stiff formal statute of George Washington - and show us the man inside it. His motivations, his principles - what he really cared about.

    The left believe this book has an "agenda" and they are correct - although not quite in the way they think they are correct.

    Glenn Beck does indeed have both political and religious objectives - this is hardly a secret, he says so every day. However, this book is really more about MORAL objectives. Beck (to use a word that he often uses about himself) was a "scumbag" for most of his life - he has tried to become a different sort of person (although he still remains very harsh in his judgements about himself), and in George Washington Beck has found a subject who tried (all his life - not just in the latter part of it as Beck has done) to live up to some very hard moral rules - and whose whole existance was centered on trying to be as good and right as he could be, every day.

    "How can a slave owner be engaged in a daily effort to be a honourable as possible?"

    "How can a soldier (i.e. a killer - for being a soldier is about being a killer) be good?"

    Actually the effort is possible - and the effort was made. For example, George Washington's slaves did not just admire him because he freed them in his will - as hard as it may be for people to understand today, they admired him whilst he was alive also.

    Beck's real "agenda" is to lead people (including himself) to follow George Washington's example in making this moral effort.

    Many others have written such attempts before (although less in the modern age). For example, the work of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius - whose "Meditations", although they touch on political questions, are really about moral character (and a rather passionate moral character for those who think that "Stoic" means what most modern people seem to think it means). However, George Washington (like most of the "Founding Fathers") believed that the COMMON MAN was capable of this degree of virture (so formally did Marcus Aurelius - but in practical terms he did not act as if he believed it). Indeed the Founders (including Washington) believed that the Republic they were building would collapse without this sense of honour in the citizens.

    Glenn Beck clearly believes the same thing - and sees the essential project (far more important than any political project) as each person restoring themselves. Making themselves the honourable people they were meant to be - only then can there be any hope for the Republic.

    An absurd dream? Or the only practical course of action - restoring the foundation of honest citizens withougt which a Republic is bound to collapse into "bread and games"?

    I do not know.

    But I do know this book is well worth reading.
  • Prudence Eely Bond McGuire "Kundun"
    5.0 out of 5 stars Washington-without him USA would not exist today..
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 1, 2011
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    It matters not how long a man lives, but, what he does while he is alive.
    Surely this says it all about the man called George Washington.