Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader

Time to Read
10 hrs 51 mins

Reading Time

10 hrs 51 mins

How long to read Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader?

The estimated word count of Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader is 162,750 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 10 hrs 51 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 18 hrs 5 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 6 hrs 2 mins.

Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader - 162,750 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 18 hrs 5 mins
Average 250 words/min 10 hrs 51 mins
Fast 450 words/min 6 hrs 2 mins
Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader by Michael J. Gerhardt
Authors
Michael J. Gerhardt

More about Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader

162,750 words

Word Count

for Lincoln's Mentors: The Education of a Leader

496 pages

Pages
Hardcover: 496 pages

17 hours and 30 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

A novel and brilliant look at how Abraham Lincoln mastered the art of leadership: acclaimed historian Michael J. Gerhardt, who appeared during the impeachment proceedings of President Trump, reveals how a group of five men mentored an obscure lawyer with no executive experience to become American’s greatest leader.In 1849, when Abraham Lincoln returned to Springfield, Illinois, after two seemingly uninspiring years in the U.S. House of Representatives, his political career appeared all but finished. He attempted to revive his law practice but was dismissed from the biggest case of his career six years later. As Lincoln’s spirits dimmed, his Democratic rival, Stephen Douglas, an advocate for slavery, became a senator and rising star. Distraught, Lincoln’s sense of failure was so great that friends worried about his sanity. Yet within a decade, Lincoln would reenter politics, become a leader of the Republican Party, win the 1860 presidential election, and keep America together during its most perilous period. What accounted for the turnaround? As Michael Gerhardt reveals, Lincoln’s reemergence followed the same path he had followed before, in which he read voraciously and studied the successes and failures, life stories, oratory, and political maneuvering of a surprisingly diverse handful of men, some of whom he had never met but some he knew intimately—Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson, Zachary Taylor, John Todd Stuart, and Orville Browning. From both their experiences and his, Lincoln learned valuable lessons on leadership, mastering party politics, campaigning, conventions, understanding and using executive power, managing a cabinet, speechwriting and oratory, and—what would become his most enduring legacy—developing policies and rhetoric to match a constitutional vision that spoke to the monumental challenges of his time. Without these mentors, Abraham Lincoln would likely have remained a small-town lawyer—and without Lincoln, the United States as we know it may not have survived. This book tells the unique story of how Lincoln learned how to emerge from obscurity and to lead.