DavidMcCullough_Conversation

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A Conversation with David McCullough, author of The Greater Journey Q: Except for your book about the Panama Canal, this is the first time you’ve ventured abroad for the main setting of one of your books. Why Paris? DM: I first saw Paris fifty years ago. My wife and I arrived late on a rainy, cold February night after a long flight and, tired as we were, we right away set off walking to see all we could. Ever since I’ve been fascinated with the city and returned whenever I could.

© William B. McCullough

The first research I did in Paris was for my book on the Panama Canal. I went back later to France to follow Harry Truman’s experiences in World War I, then to Paris again when writing about John Adams. But I’ve also had a long interest in art and architecture and a number of American writers and composers for whom Paris was essential to their work. For me it was not so much a matter of setting for the book as the particular time period in Paris and the cast of characters.

Q: Your earlier books centered on political and military events. Yet in this book, you focus mostly on artistic and cultural and scientific developments. Why? DM: One of the most important and obvious, yet too often ignored lessons of history is that there’s far more to it than politics and soldiers. Perhaps it’s because so much of our education is divided up into categories that such important aspects of life as art, music, theater, architecture, science, and poetry are seen as altogether separate from history. Yet it’s so often the art of other times that lives longest and says the most. One morning some years back I was driving down Massachusetts Avenue in Washington during the rush hour and as everything slowed to a crawl at Sheridan Circle, I looked over at the statue of General Sheridan, there on his horse in the middle of the circle with a requisite pigeon on his hat. And I began wondering how many of the thousands of people who drive around that circle twice a day every day have any idea who Phil Sheridan was. At the same time Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” was playing on my car radio and it struck me that the magic of Gershwin was as great as ever at that moment for me and everyone else tuned in. He was alive. So which of those two exceptional Americans—the general or the composer—should be taken as the more important, the more expressive of who we are and what we aspire to? In my new book I wanted to concentrate on a part of the American experience that could exemplify this point, and it struck me that the story of the talented, aspiring Americans in Paris in the nineteenth century might work perfectly. I settled on the years between 1830 and 1900, knowing relatively little had been done on that time in Paris, but scarcely imagining the treasures I was to find in the way of extraordinary diaries, letters, and private memoirs.


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DavidMcCullough_Conversation by Simon & Schuster - Issuu