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FDR.


EXCELLENT

A contemporary perspective.

In FDR, Jean Edward Smith Jean Edward Smith (born October 13, 1932, Washington, D.C.) is professor at Marshall University and biographer. Currently he is the John Marshall Professor of Political Science at Marshall University and professor emeritus at the University of Toronto after having served as  reminds readers of the 32nd American president's sweeping social reforms and his extraordinary leadership in World War II (Winston Churchill called Roosevelt the greatest man he had ever known). In the process of exploring the man behind the legend, Smith also reveals some of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's human flaws, including his efforts to keep his New Deal intact by loading the Supreme Court, his vendetta vendetta (vĕndĕt`ə) [Ital.,=vengeance], feud between members of two kinship groups to avenge a wrong done to a relative. Although the term originated in Corsica, the custom has also been practiced in other parts of Italy, in other  against members of his own party whom he viewed as political obstacles, and his longtime clandestine CLANDESTINE. That which is done in secret and contrary to law.
     2.Generally a clandestine act in case of the limitation of actions will prevent the act from running.
 affair with Lucy Mercer. Still, Smith points out, no president did more for his country in a time of need. Why one more book on the president about whom more has been written than any other, save perhaps Lincoln? "The national sacrifice," Smith writes of that volatile period, "is forgotten."

Random House. 880 pages. $35. ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 1400061210

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Denver Post CLASSIC

"Smith's richly researched--nearly 200 pages of notes and bibliography--look at the president is one of those monumental works that at the same time does not lose sight of the individual at its heart. ... One reason it can take 60 years to get a biography this satisfying is that in the interim, researchers gain access to letters, interviews, archives and a host of biographies about the players on the world stage of the 1930s and '40s." Edward P. Smith

Washington Post CLASSIC

"That [Smith] has managed to compress the whole sweep of Roosevelt's life into a bit more than 600 pages may seem in and of itself miraculous mi·rac·u·lous  
adj.
1. Of the nature of a miracle; preternatural.

2. So astounding as to suggest a miracle; phenomenal: a miraculous recovery; a miraculous escape.

3.
, but his achievement is far larger than that. ... [The author] is openly sympathetic yet ready to criticize when that is warranted, and to do so in sharp terms; he conveys the full flavor and import of Roosevelt's career without ever bogging down in detail." Jonathan Yardley

Dallas Morning News EXCELLENT

"Mr. Smith, taking full advantage of the many FDR sources from earlier biographies to the papers of the era's principals, has written a marvelous book, though it surely helps to have so engaging a subject. Little is factually new, but he provides superb perspective and captures the upbeat persona of the man whose leadership saved the nation from economic collapse, defeated Nazi tyranny Tyranny
Big Brother

omnipresent leader of a totalitarian nightmare world. [Br. Lit.: 1984]

Creon

rules Thebes with cruel decrees. [Gk. Lit.: Antigone]

Gessler

Austrian governor treats Swiss despotically; shot by Tell.
 and created the prosperous powerhouse that is the modern United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. ." Carl P. Leubsdorf

Providence Journal EXCELLENT

"Smith does a remarkably fine job of revealing FDR's complex political history while also showing the sometimes flawed, yet always brilliant, private man. ... [The author] has created a compelling, insightful and eloquent biography fully worthy of the giant being portrayed." Edward J. Renehan, Jr.

Baltimore Sun Baltimore Sun

Daily newspaper published in Baltimore, Md., U.S. It was begun as a four-page penny tabloid in 1837 by Arunah Shepherdson Abell, a journeyman printer from Rhode Island.
 GOOD

"In FDR, an engaging one-volume biography, Jean Edward Smith, a professor of political science at Marshall University On March 30, 1838, the institution was formally dedicated by the Virginia General Assembly as Marshall Academy, however the majority of its offerings remained below the college level. In 1858, the Virginia General Assembly changed the name to Marshall College. , does not challenge the conventional wisdom. ... Smith discusses Roosevelt's flaws, but FDR is a valentine, almost, though never quite, Churchillian in tone." Glen C. Altschuler

CRITICAL SUMMARY

The legacy of FDR is safe in the hands of Jean Edward Smith, a renowned academic and author of a dozen books, including the acclaimed biographies Grant (a 2002 Pulitzer Prize Pulitzer Prize

Any of a series of annual prizes awarded by Columbia University for outstanding public service and achievement in American journalism, letters, and music. Fellowships are also awarded.
 finalist), John Marshall: Defender of a Nation (1996), and Lucius D. Clay

For other people named Lucius Clay, see Lucius Clay (disambiguation).
General Lucius Dubignon Clay (April 23 1897 – April 16 1978) was an American general and military governor best known for his administration of Germany immediately after
: An American Life (1990). FDR, which captures the energy, courage, and contradictions of a full life well lived, is considered by many here as the best one-volume biography of that president to date. Several critics comment that in making exhaustive use of existing research, Smith has uncovered little new. Instead, the strength of this book lies in the author's pacing and his ability to capture the triumphs and disappointments of his subject. Jonathan Yardley, comparing Smith's effort to other onevolume accounts--James McGregor Burns's Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox (1956), Nathan Miller's FDR: An Intimate History (1983), and Ted Morgan's FDR: A Biography (1985)--concludes: "Each has its merits, but none matches the commanding authority of this one."
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Title Annotation:history
Publication:Bookmarks
Article Type:Book review
Date:Sep 1, 2007
Words:641
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