Common Sense

Common Sense

By Thomas Paine

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Thomas Paine was a prominent English-American philosopher and political activist. Paine was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States and his influential pamphlets helped inspire the American Revolution. Paine's classics such as Common Sense, Rights of Man, and The Age of Reason, are still widely read today. Common Sense is a pamphlet written by Paine in 1776 that advocated declaring independence from Great Britain. Common Sense is still among the best-selling American titles in history.
Publisher: Clydesdale Press
ISBN-13: 9781945186325
ISBN-10: 1945186321
Published on 8/1/2017
Binding: Paperback
Number of pages: 80

Book Reviews (2)

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Idk about this book all in all because as you could see in my name, I absolutely hate wordy books. I don’t know if it’s my childish nature or it’s just abnormal to read Common Sense in 7th grade. Someone tell me, because my English teacher thinkable this will improve our writing, which is good, but I seriously cannot understand anything the pamphlet states cause the wording is just so confusing and my vocabulary knowledge is very limited.

I enjoyed learning about the American Revolution in school, but actually learning it from the perspective of a colonist. If you read my review of War and Peace, this might be a bit like that. This was like War and Peace, but shorter and they used words like "thereof" more often (Not like that's a problem, obviously). It was only 58 pages long, but it still took me like an hour to read (which is really saying something). Thomas Paine's pamphlet sold over 100,000 copies in the first three months, which is pretty amazing! I mean, he might not have thought his publication would have such a huge impact on the Patriots (and now the Loyalists probably hated him. I'm not sure about the neutrals. Neutral, maybe? Whatever)!! This was AMAZING to read. If you want to read it, be warned, it's slightly dry, but if you really want to learn about the American Revolution, then you'll probably love it. My class just finished learning about the American Revolution and I really wanted to read Common Sense. So I did! It's not a novel, or a biography, or an atlas, or a fact book, but a PAMPHLET (Look it up. It's probably in the dictionary. The word pamphlet, I mean. P-A-M-P-H-L-E-T. Easy). Read it! It's good (and thin)!