What do you think?
Rate this book


Audio CD
First published January 1, 2014
Plus, you got a lot of visual material you didn't get in the PBS miniseries, like articles from newspapers and caricatures, among other things. Also, the narrative of the book was excellent - the author did not separate these three historical figures into exclusive chapters, but instead chose to show their lives unravel side-by-side. That way, you got to see the descent of TR while FDR was only starting his ascent. The parallels were fascinating.
Eleanor was a genuine First Lady - not a doll or an accessory to the President, but an intelligent woman who's persona demanded and received respect from several generations of World leaders. She was made of the stuff that the first woman President should be made of [and that is not the stuff Hillary Clinton is made of, in my uneducated opinion].I humbly bow my head before the Roosevelts.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
Franklin's presidency was ironic, because he always wanted to be like his hero, Theodore, but turned out to be exactly what Theodore himself craved to be (yet, wasn't able to be) and that is a President that successfully navigated great national crises during his administration: The Great Depression and World War II.
And Teddy... I can't write anything objective about him, because he is my personal hero, my role model. He was everything you can hope to be in a lifetime.