Historian Nigel Hamilton is a New York Times best-selling biographer of General Bernard ""Monty"" Montgomery, President John F. Kennedy, President Bill Clinton, and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, among other subjects. He has won multiple awards, including the Whitbread Prize and the Templer Medal for Military History. The first volume of his FDR at War trilogy, The Mantle of Command, was longlisted for the National Book Award. He is a senior fellow at the McCormack Graduate School, University of Massachusetts Boston, and splits his time between Boston, Massachusetts, and New Orleans, Louisiana.
""A magisterial, riveting account. More than a military or political history, this mesmerizing dual biography offers deep insights into two indomitable, history-altering personalities--born only miles apart in Kentucky--who come to see America in completely different way: one as a free, united, democratic nation, the other as a divided country where human bondage can long endure. Our frighteningly divided country needs this book urgently.""--Harold Holzer, Winner of the Lincoln Prize ""I have always wanted to read about the parallel presidencies of Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis. Now at last I can, thanks to Nigel Hamilton. Lincoln vs. Davis will be essential for anyone who seeks to understand the rivalry at the heart of the war.""--Ted Widmer, author of Lincoln on the Verge: Thirteen Days to Washington ""A monumental study of an equally monumental subject: the competing wartime presidencies of Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis. Hamilton expertly slows down time just enough for the reader to see all the intricate parts of the machine of war. Yet the story he tells--part Shakespeare, part Spielberg--is still a thrill ride.""--Michael Vorenberg (Brown University), author of Lincoln's Peace: The Struggle to End the American Civil War ""This split-screen biopic of two presidents waging war 'under false pretenses'--while first ladies Mary Lincoln and Varina Davis lift up their voices and an offstage chorus grumbles and applauds and gnashes their teeth--achieves something I wouldn't have thought possible given the buckets of ink that have been spilt pondering how this divided country inched toward emancipation: fresh and sometimes startling insights, in a book that is hard to put down.""--Lawrence N. Powell, Professor Emeritus, Tulane University ""A worthy companion to his magisterial trilogy on Franklin Delano Roosevelt's leadership in World War II, Nigel Hamilton's similar study of Abraham Lincoln (a born politician) and Jefferson Davis (a born soldier) is chock full of vivid character sketches and trenchant analysis, showing how and why these two leaders each came, via different routes during the first year and a half of the Civil War, to make a momentous decision in September 1862--choices that, as Lincoln vs. Davis convincingly argues, fatefully determined the outcome of the conflict.""--Michael Burlingame, author of Abraham Lincoln: A Life ""In today's bitterly divided America, ever more of us find ourselves thinking of the fateful moment when this country did divide in two. You will find no better guide for a journey back to that era than expert biographer Nigel Hamilton. He has found a fresh and intriguing way of framing the story in his absorbing tale of the two principal antagonists--and of some remarkable parallels between them.""--Adam Hochschild, New York Times bestselling author of Spain in Our Hearts and American Midnight