Random House, 430 pp., $8.95
'Never did America witness a stranger union than when Jefferson, the representative of ideal purity, allied himself with Aaron Burr in the expectation of fixing the United States in a career of simplicity and virtue,' Henry Adams tells us. 'And no more curious speculation could have been suggested to the politicians of 1800 than the question of whether New York would corrupt Virginia or Virginia would check the prosperity of New York.'[1]
Review, 2732 words
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