We are registering your order now. Please stay on this page while we redirect you to the confirmation page.
What does it take to hold a nation together when everything is falling apart?
Abraham Lincoln did not arrive at the presidency as a polished statesman or a celebrated hero. He arrived as a prairie lawyer from Illinois - self-educated, politically isolated, underestimated by nearly everyone around him - and walked into the most catastrophic crisis in American history. What he carried into that storm was not certainty, not comfort, and not a plan that promised ease. He carried something rarer and more durable: moral clarity.
Abraham Lincoln, the Union, and Sacrifice traces the full arc of Lincoln's extraordinary life - from the poverty of a Kentucky log cabin to the corridors of wartime Washington - and asks a question that history never stops posing: How does a leader hold to what is right when the cost of doing so keeps rising?
Drawing on Lincoln's own speeches, letters, and documented decisions, alongside the scholarship of historians and the insights of philosophy and psychology, this book examines Lincoln not as a monument but as a man. A man who suffered from severe depression and led through it. A man who assembled a Cabinet of rivals who despised him and earned their respect anyway. A man who waited, agonized, and finally acted on emancipation - not out of political convenience, but out of the conviction that some wrongs cannot be managed; they can only be ended.
Each chapter illuminates a dimension of Lincoln's leadership that speaks directly to the present: the discipline of moral courage under pressure, the strategic patience of long-term thinking, the power of language to frame a nation's conscience, the cost of sacrifice as a leadership principle, and the enduring challenge of building - and preserving - something worth fighting for.
This is not a book about the past. It is a book about what the past demands of us.
For leaders, thinkers, and anyone who has ever stood at the edge of a difficult decision and wondered what it costs to choose the harder, better thing - Lincoln's life is both a mirror and a challenge.
The path is clear, though not yet open.
Chainsaw Man Box Set
$93.87
National Geographic Atlas of the World, 11th Edition
$183.40
Invincible Compendium Volume 2
$51.64
Naruto Box Set 2: Volumes 28-48 with Premium
$128.57
Diary: Divine Mercy in My Soul (Revised)
$11.61
Netter's Anatomy Flash Cards
$41.84
It's Not You: Identifying and Healing from Narcissistic People
$18.57
Amygdala
$49.86
Mom, I Want to Hear Your Story: A Mother's Guided Journal To Share Her Life & Her Love
$13.71