Compare prices and save on cheap textbooks at CheapestTextbooks.com
Compare prices and save on cheap textbooks at CheapestTextbooks.com HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
CheapestCDPrice.comCheapestDVDPrice.comCheapestTextbooks.comGo to CheapestTextbooks USA!Go to CheapestTextbooks UK!
Multi-Store Textbook Search
  
(What's this?)
Selected Product:

no
picture
available
Autobiography

Large Print
Edition: Largeprint
Author: Benjamin Franklin
Publisher: North Books
Release Date: 1998-01
ISBN-10: 0939495562
ISBN-13: 9780939495566
List Price: $25.00
Average Customer Rating:
Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5
Similar Products

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
ISBN-10: 1438245416
ISBN-13: 9781438245416
List Price:$4.95


Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (Signet Classics)
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (Signet Classics)
ISBN-10: 0451529944
ISBN-13: 9780451529947
List Price:$4.95


The Way to Wealth
The Way to Wealth
ISBN-10: 0918222885
ISBN-13: 9780918222886
List Price:$9.95


The Scarlet Letter (Penguin Classics)
The Scarlet Letter (Penguin Classics)
ISBN-10: 0142437263
ISBN-13: 9780142437261
List Price:$7.00


Poor Richard's Almanack
Poor Richard's Almanack
ISBN-10: 1602391173
ISBN-13: 9781602391178
List Price:$9.95


Our Review: To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Autobiography by Benjamin Franklin (ISBN-10: 0939495562, ISBN-13: 9780939495566).

At this time we have not yet written a review for Autobiography by Benjamin Franklin (ISBN-10: 0939495562, ISBN-13: 9780939495566). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews.

Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Summary:
Edited, with an Introduction, by R.J. Wilson

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5

an important work - should be read by all young men
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
I have read this book myself at least twice. This book was purchased as a graduation present for a nephew. I wish someone had made me read this book at the age of 13. Franklin is quite the character. There are a lot of controversies surrounding his life, but for the purpose of instruction, I prefer to quit the debating society. This fellow is the first native born genius of record produced in this country. He may have painted a rosy picture of his life, but any of us would in an autobiography. If you want a critical examination of his life, check out some of the excellent athoritive biographies available. If you want inspiration, read this. Most inspiring are the roles that thrift and hard work played in his success and his practical approach to striving for "moral perfection".

Non-Fiction
Customer Rating:  Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3
This says Norton Critical Edition, so, of course, designed for academic study.

A man that of course did a whole pile of stuff and came up with a whole pile more.

Entertaining at times, and lecturing at others, as you might expect from someone that had been in a privileged position.

Franklin's informal account of his remarkable life
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
In many ways, this is, to someone coming to it for the first time, a very surprising book. For one thing, it is amazingly incomplete. Franklin is, of course, one of the most famous Americans who ever lived, and his accomplishments in a wide array of endeavors are a part of American lore and popular history. A great deal of this lore and many of his accomplishments are missing from this account of his life. He never finished the autobiography, earlier in his life because he was too busy with what he terms public "employments," and later in life because the opium he was taking for kidney stones left him unable to concentrate sufficiently. Had Franklin been able to write about every period of his life and all of his achievements, his AUTOBIOGRAPHY would have been one of the most remarkable documents every produced. It is amazingly compelling in its incomplete state.
As a serious reader, I was delighted in the way that Franklin is obsessed with the reading habits of other people. Over and over in the course of his memoir, he remarks that such and such a person was fond of reading, or owned a large number of books, or was a poet or author. Clearly, it is one of the qualities he most admires in others, and one of the qualities in a person that makes him want to know a person. He finds other readers to be kindred souls.

If one is familiar with the Pragmatists, one finds many pragmatist tendencies in Franklin's thought. He is concerned less with ideals than with ideas that work and are functional. For instance, at one point he implies that while his own beliefs lean more towards the deistical, he sees formal religion as playing an important role in life and society, and he goes out of his way to never criticize the faith of another person. His pragmatism comes out also in list of the virtues, which is one of the more famous and striking parts of his book. As is well known, he compiled a list of 13 virtues, which he felt summed up all the virtues taught by all philosophers and religions. But they are practical, not abstract virtues. He states that he wanted to articulate virtues that possessed simple and not complex ideas. Why? The simpler the idea, the easier to apply. And in formulating his list of virtues, he is more concerned with the manner in which these virtues can be actualized in one's life. Franklin has utterly no interest in abstract morality.

One of Franklin's virtues is humility, and his humility comes out in the form of his book. His narrative is exceedingly informal, not merely in the first part, which was ostensibly addressed to his son, but in the later sections (the autobiography was composed upon four separate occasions). The informal nature of the book displays Franklin's intended humility, and for Franklin, seeming to be so is nearly as important as actually being so. For part of the function of the virtues in an individual is not merely to make that particular person virtuous, but to function as an example to others. This notion of his being an example to other people is one of the major themes in his book. His life, he believes, is an exemplary one. And he believes that by sharing the details of his own life, he can serves as a template for other lives.

One striking aspect of his book is what one could almost call Secular Puritanism. Although Franklin was hardly a prude, he was nonetheless very much a child of the Puritans. This is not displayed merely in his promotion of the virtues, but in his abstaining from excessiveness in eating, drinking, conversation, or whatever. Franklin is intensely concerned with self-governance.

I think anyone not having read this before will be surprised at how readable and enjoyable this is. I think also one can only regret that Franklin was not able to write about the entirety of his life. He was a remarkable man with a remarkable story to tell.

shallow account of a great life.
Customer Rating:  Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3
no doubt about it: ben franklin was a bright fellow. brigher than me, for instance. his autobiography, however, and despite what people on amazon are saying, is a shallow piece of fluff. nothing is touched in depth as he skims from one episode to the next like he is racing to finish an unimportant task. his wife? his family? forget them. all people in his life, in fact, seem deserving of no deep consideration to mr franklin. at times he brags about himself under the guise of modesty, and it is both silly and annoying. plenty of excellent biograhy work out there on this man, and one would be much better served to pick up one of those. it simply boggles my mind that anyone could consider this a 5 star piece of literature. there is not the slightest bit of passion in this writing. mr franklin doesn't even seem terribly interested in what he is writing about. amazon reveiwers seem to award 5 stars to almost anything they read, without the slightest trace of critical detachment. yes, this is a book you would not be wasting your time reading, simply because these are the words of benjamin franklin, but that's it. this is not great literature. not even close.

You've Got to Love Ben!
Customer Rating:  Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4
As everyone else has noted, Ben was a brilliant man and an entertaining writer. This is classic American literature, particularly in how it shows a "character" striving to rise up and better himself because that is the promise of the American Dream.

I docked Ben one star because the unfinished ending is not satisfying to someone who comes across this book for the first time. Just so you know, if you get lost during the third part, Ben is discussing the French Indian War.

The Dover edition is very nice and anyone should be satisfied with it.

























Suggestions | Textbook Store Reviews | Site Map | Textbook Reviews | Contact Us
Cheap Textbooks | Used Textbooks | Discount Textbooks | Buy College Textbooks
© 2008 . All rights reserved. Privacy Statement and Disclaimer
web site design and support by Crystal Solutions