Paine, Thomas, and Sidney Hook. Common Sense: The Rights of Man, and Other Essential Writings of Thomas Paine. New York: Penguin, 1984. Print. Annotated Bibliography Collins, Paul. The Trouble with Tom: The Strange Afterlife and times of Thomas Paine. New York: Bloomsbury, 2005. Print. This book reviews the legacy of Thomas Paine. “Some people have lived everywhere, but Thomas Pain is altogether more rare. He has died everywhere.” The loss of his first wife and only child in child birth At one time the most hated man in America, England and France, he played a key role in these three modern democracies. The most dangerous man alive, a walking revolution. But in later years as he slipped into obscurity, how he resorted to the bottle during the last four years of …show more content…
His philosophizing with the incomprehensible John Stewart. As he aged in the early nineteenth century how “instead of dying like a gentleman, Paine lingered on and on.” His seeming enjoyment in his refusal to recant his religious beliefs against the stream of evangelicals toward the end of his life. Or that at his request his life’s epitaph would be summed as Author of Common Sense. “he does not want your tradition, he wants you reason.” Locations: Philadelphia-1774 letter of recommendation to Richard bache; return to America New York, 59 grove st-1805, 36 cedar st1806, 85 church st, bleeker st-winter 1806, baker on broome st-spring 1807,herring st-1809; New Rochelle, Westchester county- rented out& auctioned wall st and water st off w. Thomas himself. Kaye, Harvey J. Thomas Paine and the Promise of America. New York: Hill and Wang, 2005. Print. The failing in Paine’s life made him stronger person and more capable writer at his core. Kaye briefly mentions Paine’s private and professional working-class background as he struggled before coming to America which included; corsetmaking, privateering, tax collecting, preaching, teaching, labor campaigning, shopkeeping, bout of poverty, the loss of