ABSTRACT

Imaginary Friendship is the first in-depth study of the onset of the American Revolution through the prism of friendship, focusing on future US president John Adams and leading Loyalist Jonathan Sewall. The book is part biography, revealing how they shaped each other’s progress, and part political history, exploring their intriguing dangerous quest to clean up colonial politics. Literary history examines the personal dimension of discourse, resolving how Adams’s presumption of Sewall’s authorship of the Loyalist tracts Massachusettensis influenced his own magnum opus, Novanglus. The mystery is not why Adams presumed Sewall was his adversary in 1775 but why he was impelled to answer him.

chapter |19 pages

Prologue

History

chapter 1|21 pages

Friendship

chapter 2|16 pages

John and Jonathan

chapter 3|22 pages

Politics

chapter 4|21 pages

The King’s Law

chapter 5|22 pages

Imagining Revolution

chapter 6|15 pages

Massachusettensis and Novanglus

chapter 7|21 pages

Debate

chapter 8|17 pages

The British Question

chapter 9|15 pages

Revolution

chapter |9 pages

Epilogue

War and Reunion