Teddy Roosevelt's wife and mother died on the same night in his home in New York City. To outdistance his grief, he turned his back on a promising political career and fled to the badlands. Dakota deals with the restoration of his spirit during this little known time in his life in the midst of a thrilling adventure in the Wild West.
As with most of Braun’s books it was entertaining from start to finish. It is a work of fiction that does manage to catch the spirit of Roosevelt and how the West influenced his life just after the untimely death of his wife and mother in the same day. I chuckle a bit at the readers who read Braun and believe it is an accurate account of the characters. It is commercial fiction and Braun does not pretend to be giving an accurate account. Much like the movie Tombstone, it is for entertainment purposes and not to be used as a literature source of information.
3.75 stars for a fun little western set in Medora, ND with Teddy Roosevelt as the star and the Marquis de Mores as the villain. The author did a good job at incorporating true facts about TR's time in the Badlands, but there was quite a bit added that was purely fictional.
Good fictional cover of Theodore Roosevelt's Dakota territory days. Bought it not realizing I had already read it but once I got started it clicked. Still good the second time through
This was my introduction to Teddy Roosevelt, who I have been wanting to read about for a long time. Not a fan of the writing style--Braun tries to write history like it's a novel, filling in gaps in dialogue and perhaps more with his imagination--but I came away from it thoroughly impressed with Roosevelt. The man had an insanely interesting life (this book covers only his mid to late 20's). Favorite part--where an arrogant Frenchman challenges him to a duel, and Roosevelt (bluffing) chooses shotguns as the weapons, ensuring that both of them would be killed or disfigured. Wow! Pretty gutsy bluff, but it worked.
UPDATE! WARNING! WARNING! I just read a respectable biography about Roosevelt by David McCulloh, and either Braun or McCulloh is making stuff up about Roosevelt's Dakota days. I'm betting it is Braun, and that is so irritating. Even the "shotgun" incident I mention above was probably a huge exaggeration, and I was sooo disappointed. Dang you Braun! Don't try to Hollywoodize a man who needs no embellishment!
I found it interesting that I loved the parts of the book where Roosevelt is in New York- and I was puzzled as to why I lost interest when he was in Dakota. I wanted to like this book- but I couldn't keep interested with the "out west" characters.