Liberty's Exiles Audiobook By Maya Jasanoff cover art

Liberty's Exiles

American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World

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Liberty's Exiles

By: Maya Jasanoff
Narrated by: L. J. Ganser
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About this listen

National Book Critics Circle Award, Nonfiction, 2012

After the American Revolution, 60,000 British loyalists fled the U.S. for Canada, the Caribbean, India, and other points abroad. Jasanoff traces their harrowing journeys across the globe, shedding light on their ambitions, the post-revolutionary world they encountered, and their legacies.

©2011 Maya Jasanoff (P)2012 Recorded Books
Emigration & Immigration Great Britain Revolution & Founding England Imperialism
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Outstanding, Detailed, Broad in Scope and finely written.

The economic primacy of the sugar plantations with the horrible conditions is rarely appreciated by modern Americans or Britains. The 13 rebellious colonies main value to Britain in 1776 was as a food supplier to the sugar colonies. Parliament understood Jamaica and Barbados as 40 of their members made their fortunes in those islands. Parliament understood the East India Company as 40 percent of the members owned stock in the company. Parliament did not understand the 13 rebel colonies as only a few had been there in military service. This fine book truly educates the reader regarding the lives and circumstances of the Loyalists during and after the American Revolution. I greatly appreciate the remarkable effort to create such a fine work.

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America's First Civil War

What did you love best about Liberty's Exiles?

Maya Jasanoff's narrative on what might be thought of as America's first civil war — the Revolution — is an engaging and comprehensive account of Americans who remained loyal to Britain and their postwar efforts to reclaim their lives in Canada, the Caribbean, India, Africa, and other parts of the British Empire. The narrator, L.J. Ganzer, does an able job, but because the author is female I think the narrator should have been female too.

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2 people found this helpful

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The thoroughness

Well researched and written. Very interesting interpretation of the American Revolution which she sees as a civil war with loyalists as victims.

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Liberty's exiles

I have read other books on the loyalist of the American Revolution , however I have never read or heard of a book where the loyalists are treated as a Diaspora . I have heard of loyalists who have gone to Britain or other places of the globe but never treated as a group. Good read.

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Excellent

I have listened twice now and I purchased the book. Excellent information captured a piece of forgotten history.

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Staggering in its Breadth

Jasanoff is an exceptionally talented historian who has apparently left no archive unopened in this sweeping history of the War of American Independence as an episode in British imperial history, indeed possibly the opening act in the modern age of imperialism. The lens she uses is that of the American Loyalists, who, as she demonstrates, were far more diverse than the familiar picture painted by old-style Canadian “Red Tory” historians (which Jasanoff, along the way, argues is a post-1812 revision and oversimplification). As it turns out, the lens is something of a kaleidoscope: Loyalists of all classes, colors, and motivations end up not only in provinces that would later become Canada, but in Jamaica, the Bahamas, the unwon American backcountry, Great Britain, Sierra Leone, and India (sometimes by roundabout routes that take them as far as the Philippines). We also see—and begin to understand why Jasanoff (not an Americanist, but a historian of the British Empire) has taken on this story—the re-merging of British and American interests after the “Revolution,” and the emergence of an English-speaking liberal global hegemony, as well as a pretty compelling case that republicanism (for better or worse, Jasanoff isn’t saying) and imperialism are hardly at odds. Acknowledged but unexplored is the fact that a majority of Loyalists simply remained in what became the United States.
A masterful achievement that I highly recommend.
As for the audio version, woman’s voice might have been nice, as the author is a woman. Ganser’s voice and diction are not ideally suited to scholarly writing. He consistently mis-emphasizes Jasanoff’s oft-used phrase “For all that X Y Z ...,” as if it were offset with a comma, and this becomes rather annoying after about ten times. And he very occasionally misreads French words as (apparently unfamiliar) English words. Nevertheless, it’s a long book to have read into a microphone, and on the whole his reading is of very high quality and not at all soporific. So I say, “Well done, Mr. Ganser.”

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Whatever happened to the Loyalists?

History is written by the victors, I enjoyed listening to the plight of the Loyalists after the war. However way too long with inconsequential details and big words. the whole thing could have been cut in half with just as much effect. would have also preferred a little more in the "during" the war, as it were it is only in the aspect of post-war. But interesting audiobook

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