This life of Hodge by his son and
successor, Archibald Alexander Hodge,
written shortly after his father's
death, brings together a wealth of
materian from Hodge's letters, diaries,
journal articles, and personal
reflections. The story is likely to
appeal to more than one kind of reader.
Those who know Hodge as the author of a
famous Systematic Theology and several
Bible commentaries, but have little
knowledge of the man, will find here an
absorbing account of his joys and
sorrows, struggles and victories,
travels and friendships, and strongly-
held views on a vast range of subject;
while those who, with C.H.
Spurgeon, 'value every morsel about the
Princeton worthies', will delight in
the mine of information here opened up.
In addition, those with a more general
interest in American and nineteenth-
century history will be able to assess
the reactions of a conservative but
generous-minded thinker to the Civil
War, the expansion of the United
States, and almost every major issue of
the time. For all kinds of readers,
Charles Hodge will come alive in these
pages.