In pursuit of Jefferson Traveling through Europe with the most perplexing Founding Father

Derek Baxter, 1973-

Book - 2022

"In 1784, travel wrenched Thomas Jefferson out of the darkest period of his life. He sailed to France a broken man, but on the road, he rediscovered a world of hidden beauty and penned a guide he called "Hints for Americans Traveling in Europe." During a crisis of his own, Derek Baxter dares himself to follow Jefferson's route. On a series of journeys (piloting a Dutch canal boat, hiking the French Alps, and fishing in the Atlantic), Baxter follows the obscure guide across six countries. But not all of his insights into the life of the complex founding father are pleasant. "In Pursuit of Jefferson" is the surprising story of one man's travels through Europe, led by Thomas Jefferson, and the lessons he lear...ns about history--and himself--along the way"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Jefferson, Thomas
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Subjects
Genres
Travel writing
Published
Naperville, Illinois : Sourcebooks [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Derek Baxter, 1973- (author)
Item Description
Includes reading group guide and a conversation with the author (pages 338-344).
Physical Description
405 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 350-389) and index.
ISBN
9781728225388
9781728259406
  • Chapter 1. The Starting Line
  • Chapter 2. Something New Under the Sun
  • Chapter 3. Traveling like Jefferson
  • Chapter 4. Paris, Springtime
  • Chapter 5. The Earth Belongs Always to the Living
  • Chapter 6. Rambles through the Vineyards
  • Chapter 7. Jefferson's Dream
  • Chapter 8. Sitting in an English Garden
  • Chapter 9. Behind the Fence
  • Chapter 10. A Continued Feast through Italy
  • Chapter 11. The Rice Smuggler
  • Chapter 12. Remedial Education
  • Chapter 13. The Architecture of Dreams
  • Chapter 14. Those Who Labor for My Happiness
  • Chapter 15. Hard Truths
  • Chapter 16. Look Closer: Stories of the Enslaved
  • Chapter 17. The Long Walk to Freedom
  • Chapter 18. The Last Days of the Ancien Régime
  • Chapter 19. French Revolutions
  • Chapter 20. A la Recherche du Moose Perdu
  • Chapter 21. As If Both Sides of the Atlantic Were Not Warmed by the Same Genial Sun
  • Chapter 22. We'll Always Have Paris
  • Chapter 23. The Never-Ending Pursuit of Happiness
  • Acknowledgments
  • Reading Group Guide
  • A Conversation with the Author
  • Illustration Credits
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Baxter's first book is an inspired travelogue about his extensive, eight-year European adventure following Thomas Jefferson's own journey and his little-known travel guide. Baxter, an attorney with a history degree from the University of Virginia, found obvious connection with Jefferson. Traveling with his family, he was led by eager curiosity to learn about everything from architecture to formal gardens to wine. He also gleaned deep personal lessons. Baxter's twenty-first-century eyes inevitably couldn't see Jefferson without pondering the hypocrisy and racism inherent in our nation's founding. Such sobering lessons bring new meaning to Jefferson's comment, "Travel makes men wiser, but less happy." Baxter sprinkles in historical information as he attempts to reconcile Jefferson's many facets, realizing along the way that he is actually searching for his own story. He reflects on the times and country in which he lives and who he is because of them. The author may have followed in Jefferson's footsteps, but his personal journey took its own course. Baxter's humorous, warm voice is one readers will hope to hear more of in the future.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Attorney Baxter debuts with an entertaining and informative chronicle of his attempt to recreate Thomas Jefferson's travels in Europe. A lifelong history buff who played Jefferson in an elementary school musical, Baxter explains that the founding father lived in Paris, where he served as America's ambassador to France, from 1784 to 1789 and made excursions to England, the South of France, Amsterdam, and other locales. After coming across an unpublished travel guide written by Jefferson--including a detailed itinerary and eight "objects of attention" to focus on during the journey--Baxter set out to follow in Jefferson's footsteps. Spreading their trips over eight years, Baxter and his family dine at famous Parisian restaurants, go wine tasting in Burgundy, visit English gardens and Dutch museums, and marvel at Rome's architecture. Baxter also interweaves the history of the French Revolution and reflections on contemporary political and social matters, including the "yellow vest" protests against a proposed gas tax in France. Visits to the Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery in Nantes, France, and the Monticello estate in Virginia lead to forthright reflections on Jefferson's racism and Baxter's white privilege. Despite a few trite observations ("Jefferson never even set foot in a train"), Baxter manages to bridge the 18th and 21st centuries with skill. This historically informed travelogue delights. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

This jaunty, inventive approach to an old question--who was Thomas Jefferson?--turns out to be a wise, readable, and altogether satisfying work. In his first book, Baxter relates his numerous European journeys following in Jefferson's footsteps, guided by the Virginian's little-known 1788 book, Hints to Americans Traveling in Europe. Accompanied by his wife and children, the author traveled through England and much of Western Europe. Voraciously curious, he visited farms, vineyards, and towns while observing, among other things, architecture, cheese making, and viticulture, all with the engaging ingenuousness of a youngster. Baxter also unhesitatingly departed from Jefferson's Hintsto follow his guide's itineraries in the eastern U.S. Open to everything, the author remained full of good humor--until, with growing discomfort, he realized that the life and ease of his guide and hero was at every turn built on slavery. Consequently, this often chatty, light-spirited book about a citizen scientist turns into a somber reflection on the contradiction at the heart of American history. Readers shouldn't expect the measured gravity of the Odysseyor the bite of Paul Theroux's travelogues. This is travel writing in a different mode: chatty, sometimes corny, unfailingly warmhearted. Baxter's earnestness, most evident in his encounters with the people that he met along the way, was always grounded in a serious purpose--to see and learn what Jefferson saw and learned. The author also takes on another aim: to figure out how to make sense in the early 21st century of a slaveholding author who wrote a world-historical testament to freedom. Here, Baxter, his easy nature sobered, is at his honest and most candid best. What's particularly refreshing is that he captures his own amateur historian's growth in knowledge, then in confusion, and finally in rueful, disenthralled acknowledgement of the inconsistencies, hypocrisy, blindness, and selfishness that existed side by side with Jefferson's greatness. An unusually pleasing and affecting guide to Europe through the eyes of two tourists separated by more than 230 years. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.