Edward G. Gray (1964–2023) has taught early American history at Florida State University since 1999. He served as department chair from Fall of 2013 through summer of 2022. His books include New World Babel: Languages and Nations in Early America (1999), The Making of John Ledyard: Empire and Ambition in the Life of an Early American Traveler (2007), and Mason-Dixon: Crucible of the Nation (2023). He is also co-editor, with Jane Kamensky, of the Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution (2012). Gray's work has been supported by fellowships from the John Carter Brown Library, the Andrew Mellon Foundation/Huntington Library, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Fulbright Foundation, the American Philosophical Society, and the Florida State University College of Arts & Sciences.
""Edward G. Gray's fascinating and important book...reveals that Paine was as committed to building a new order as he was to tearing down the old...[Gray] gives us Paine as we have never seen him before."" - Kathleen DuVal (The Wall Street Journal) ""Gray...brings the radical pamphleteer alive as an architect of iron bridges...[and] adds to the body of knowledge about a passionate man and the tumultuous era in which he lived."" (Publisher's Weekly) ""Vividly written and rich with insight, this book about [Paine's] attempts to build an ideal America illuminates the nexus of politics, science, and art in the age of revolutions."" - Alan Taylor (The Week) ""Highly readable."" - Bethany McClean (Strategy + Business)