James A. Michener
Norman Starr is about to be tried because of his role in the Iran-Contra affair. To prepare for trial, his lawyer friend, Zack McMaster, asks him to research his patriotic family history. Each chapter focuses on a member of his family.
Jared Starr signed the Declaration of Independence and died fighting against the rebels in the Whiskey Rebellion. His son, Simon Starr, went to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, where he got to know Hamilton and James Madison. He calls James Wilson the Father of the Constitution, and Gouverneur Morris the most influential writer in condensing the Convention's work.
Justice Edmund Starr. weighing over 300 pounds and depicted by newspapers as a sleepy walrus, presided over cases with John Marshall. Since he didn't understand the complex details of the cases, Marshall would explain them, and he would support him. One case, McCulloch v. Maryland, established the right of the federal government to do things not expressly written in the constitution, and forbid states to tax the federal government. In his argument, Daniel Webster said, "The power to tax is the power to destroy."
General Hugh Starr was at West Point while Civil War tensions were rising. Northerners admired him when he freed his slaves, but in the end, he was loyal to Virginia and became General Lee's right hand man. His daughter, Emily Starr, sacrificed marriage for the sake of fighting for women's suffrage through the 19th Amendment.
Richard Starr, hardened by the Great Depression, campaigned against Roosevelt's N.R.A., which he believed was unconstitutional.
Norman's father is a World War II veteran who lost a leg in combat. His mother, Rachel Starr, fought to have the Supreme Court order state legislatures to reapportion seats since the current system discriminated against urban voters.
Zack convinces Norman to take the Fifth, but then Rachel's father, an immigrant from Poland and Czechoslovakia, reminded him that as a member of the military, his actions would reflect upon the country and Constitution.
Excerpts of this book may be useful in teaching a history class, but overall, it may be too heavy reading for most grade school students, and there are a few bad words.
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