Morgan, Edmund. 2004. The Genuine Article: A Historian Looks at Early America. W.W. Norton and Company.
This is a collection of book reviews by a noted American (in both senses) historian. The book reviews, as is standard in the New York Review of Books where they appeared, do more than just narrowly remark on a particular book; instead, they provide brief introductions to particular literatures in the course of putting the book or books at hand into context. I enjoyed it throughout.
But shouldn't it be "An Historian"?
Recommended if you are into such things.
Amazon book page
Barnes and Noble book page
"A" versus "An" is based on the first sound, not the first letter, of the following word. If the first letter is a voiced h (e.g., historian, home) you use an "a". If the first letter is an unvoiced h (e.g., hour, herb) then you use an "an". A perfectly good title could be "An Hour with A Historian".
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