Abraham Lincoln | Nobel Prize | Pulitzer Prize | Lincoln | Nobel Peace Prize | Lincoln, Nebraska | Nobel Prize in Literature | Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine | Nobel Prize in Chemistry | Lincoln's Inn | Lincoln Memorial | Nobel prize | Archibald Prize | Turner Prize | Lincoln Cathedral | Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts | Lincoln City F.C. | Lincoln City | Nobel Prize in Physics | Lincoln's Inn Fields | Bishop of Lincoln | Man Booker Prize | Lincoln Park | Lincoln, England | Lincoln County | Lincoln Ellsworth | Lincoln Park, Chicago | Lincoln Laboratory | Lincoln Highway | Lincoln (2012 film) |
His first American Civil War book, Brother Again Brother: The Lost Civil War Diary of Lt. Edmund Halsey (Citadel Press, 1997), was followed by the dual biography of the Civil War’s leaders, Two American Presidents: Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, 1861 1865 (Citadel, 1999), a finalist for the Lincoln Prize.
His best known work is the 2004 book Lincoln: A Life of Purpose and Power, a political biography which particularly focuses on how Abraham Lincoln mobilised evangelical Protestants to gain support for the Union and emancipation; this book won the Lincoln Prize.