Storia della Guerra della Independenza degli Stati Uniti di America, vol. 3

(9 User reviews)   2174
By Caleb Zhao Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - The Quiet Hall
Botta, Carlo, 1766-1837 Botta, Carlo, 1766-1837
Italian
Hey, I just finished the third volume of Carlo Botta's history of the American Revolution, and it's not what I expected at all. Forget dry dates and troop movements. This book reads like an epic drama where the fate of a nation hangs by a thread. The main conflict here isn't just Britain versus the colonies anymore; it's the brutal, messy reality of a long war. Botta puts you right in the middle of the exhaustion, the political infighting, and the sheer grit it took to keep going after years of struggle. He shows you how close the whole experiment came to falling apart. It's about the moment when winning wasn't guaranteed, and the revolutionaries had to decide what they were really fighting for. If you think you know how America won its independence, this volume will make you think again. It's the story of the hard part, told with surprising passion by an Italian writer who saw it as a world-changing event.
Share

So, you've made it to Volume 3 of Carlo Botta's massive history. By this point, the initial fireworks of Lexington and Concord are a memory. The Declaration is signed, and the war is a grinding, exhausting fact of life. This book picks up when the glamour has worn off.

The Story

Botta guides us through the middle years of the war, a period often glossed over. We're with Washington's army during the tough winter at Valley Forge, where cold and hunger were bigger enemies than the British. We see the political battles in the Continental Congress, where funding the war was a constant headache and unity was fragile. The narrative follows the shifting fortunes—American setbacks, strategic pivots, and the crucial entry of France into the conflict. It's less about a single, famous battle and more about the sustained effort to simply survive as a nation long enough to win.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this 19th-century Italian's perspective so compelling is his clear admiration for the American cause. He doesn't write as a detached scholar; he writes as someone who believes this revolution changed everything. You feel his respect for Washington's stubborn leadership and his frustration with the logistical nightmares. He makes you understand that independence wasn't won in a brilliant flash, but was earned through persistence, compromise, and a lot of sheer luck. Reading this, you appreciate the revolution not as a foregone conclusion, but as a precarious project that could have failed at so many points.

Final Verdict

This isn't a breezy introduction. It's for the reader who already has a basic timeline of the Revolution and wants to go deeper, to feel the weight and the worry of those years. It's perfect for history buffs who enjoy classic narrative histories, or for anyone curious about how a European intellectual viewed America's founding saga. Be ready for Botta's formal, older style, but if you settle into it, you'll find a powerful and surprisingly human account of a nation being forged in the hardest of times.



đź”– Community Domain

This content is free to share and distribute. Share knowledge freely with the world.

Joseph Miller
8 months ago

Impressive quality for a digital edition.

William Davis
4 months ago

I found the data interpretation to be highly professional and unbiased.

Joseph Jackson
7 months ago

A must-have for graduate-level students in this discipline.

Thomas Rodriguez
10 months ago

I stumbled upon this title during my weekend research and the author clearly has a deep mastery of the subject matter. This adds significant depth to my understanding of the field.

Mary Smith
1 month ago

Having explored several resources on this, I find that the formatting on mobile devices is surprisingly crisp and clear. I am looking forward to the author's next publication.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (9 User reviews )

Add a Review

Your Rating *

Related eBooks