Ron Chernow’s bestselling books include The House of Morgan, winner of the National Book Award; The Warburgs, which won the George S. Eccles Prize; The Death of the Banker; Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award; Washington: A Life, which received the Pulitzer Prize for Biography; and Alexander Hamilton, nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award and adapted into the award-winning Broadway musical Hamilton. Chernow has served as president of PEN American Center and has received seven honorary doctoral degrees. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.
“A twentieth-century epic [told] with authority, sympathy, and
panache. . . . Important, fascinating, and moving.” —The Washington
Post Book World
“Excellent. . . . An enthralling story, told with a novelist’s
zest.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Splendid. . . . Chernow does a wonderful job fleshing out the
lives of the major characters in this family drama.” —The Wall
Street Journal
“[Ron Chernow] has surpassed himself in this absorbing chronicle.”
—The New Yorker
“This is grand-scale scholarship. . . . It is all here, along with
so much of the painful, tumultuous history of our time, all in one
splendid book.” —David McCullough, author of The Wright
Brothers
“Ron Chernow’s blockbuster history traces the heart-rending saga of
this German-Jewish banking family. . . . Despite his scrupulous
documentation of sources, Chernow is never less than readable. A
graceful and lucid writer, he offers old-fashioned narrative in the
grand style.” —Newsday
“The history of a fascinating family. . . . What we learn about in
this book is people. . . . Chernow is very good at bringing them to
life. He has a sharp eye for detail. . . . One can open the book
anywhere and enjoy it.” —The New Republic
“Ron Chernow . . . has made the stories of these four brothers the
cornerstones of a dark, though not quite tragic, family saga. [He
is] a graceful writer with an eye for the telling anecdote. . . .
The result is a book of considerable pathos and immediacy. . . .
Through his portrait of this complex dynastic organism, he sheds
interesting light on various larger historical themes.” —The Boston
Globe
“Excellent family history. . . . This chronicle of one of the most
important banking families in history tells us much about the
people. . . . A great, and lengthy, saga.” —The Times (London)
“The Warburgs stand revealed as a family more fortune-kissed, fated
and fascinating even than the Kennedys, and . . . just as important
. . . and now their story has been ably told.” —The New York Daily
News
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