I thought it would be appropriate to start off with a short author biography of one of my favorite authors, David McCullough. He may be my favorite author right now, but the jury is still out on that. Either way, he is a fantastic historian and biographer. Most people have heard of "1776" or "John Adams" which were McCullough's two most recent books. You may not have heard about many of his others, which are all very interesting and none of which have anything to do with the American Revolution like the most recent two. But, I'm getting ahead of myself. First, the author...David McCullough is a fellow Pennsylvanian, having grown up in Pittsburgh. He graduated from Yale with an English degree and later went to work in Washington, D.C. as an editor. While in D.C., he came upon some old pictures of the aftermath of the Johnstown Flood that occurred in the late nineteenth century in a small city called Johnstown that is near Pittsburgh. He became interesting in learning more about this tragedy that he had only learned little about as a child. He began researching and writing a book about this event at night and on the weekends. When the book, "The Johnstown Flood", became an unexpected best-seller in 1968, he quit his job and starting writing full time. The rest, as they say, is history. He has now written 8 books, two of which won the Pulitzer Prize, with two others winning the National Book Award. I love the fact that David McCullough still writes all of his books on an old typewriter (yes, even the 1000+ page "Truman"). Every morning, he leaves his back door and walks down a stone path to his "office" - a white wood garden-shed-type of shack - where he sits at his typewriter and works on his next book. McCullough has a masterful way of telling a story and bringing characters to life. He'll bring you right into the story. His books, in chronological order, are:
The Johnstown Flood
The Great Bridge
The Path Between the Seas
Brave Companions
Mornings on Horseback
Truman
John Adams
1776

(I will definitely review several of these books in future chapters). My favorite of McCullough's books is definitely "The Great Bridge
So, I would encourage you to check out David McCullough and his great histories and biographies if you haven't already. As for "The Great Bridge", I would highly recommend that you...
Buy the Book!!!