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Spencer W Kimball

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An excellent overview of the life of Spencer W Kimball. Offers many of his insights and personal comments about a number of issues he dealt with during his life and his service as an Apostle. Stories about his childhood, success in business, and the horrible battles he fought with his health are enlightening. Well worth taking the time to read. The period of time he served as LDS Church President is covered in "Lengthen Your Stride," written by the same authors.

438 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1977

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Edward L. Kimball

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 115 reviews
Profile Image for Sharon.
96 reviews
May 23, 2012
I read this in 1978, the summer when Pres. Kimball announced priesthood revelation, Manifesto 2. It was amazing, then, to hold a biography of a living prophet--I loved getting facts about his early life and about his history, long and painful, with illnesses. His example and beliefs informed and influenced my coming of age. I struggled to make up my mind about serving a mission, but after reading a Church News report of one of his Oct. 1980 General Conference talks, prayed and made up my mind. "Do it" said it all. These 32 years later, my feelings toward him are visceral. Not that Pres. Hinckley is any less a man or prophet, still, I wish my adult children had had, during their teen years, these experiences, too, of witnessing the power and love that Pres. Kimball emminated. This biography's prose is imperfect with respect to repetition of certain phrases; I wish it had stellar lyrical qualities to parallel the stellar life. That being said, the facts are riveting and plainly presented. No pretense, but also quiet perceptions and understanding. I remember being appalled when reading this in 1978 how infrequently members send flowers or in some gracious way say "thanks" to our visiting general authorities. We take their travels for granted, esp. in the 70s when I was fortunate enough to attend 2 stake conferences, both of Philadelphia stake, where Elder Kimball presided (he was president of the Quorum of 12 Apostles). I look forward to reading, first time, Edward Kimball's sequel, "Lengthen Your Stride, The Presidency of SWK." This biography provided ample prelude, and then some!
252 reviews2 followers
December 19, 2009
As a 12-year-old bassist I shared the stage of the DAR Constitution Hall in Washington,D.C. with many other musicians. The concluding speaker was a short, bald, white-haired man who paused every so often to drink from a glass of water by the podium. I decided to listen. After the meeting ended I neglected my musical duties and approached him, fearing that I would be reproved, but wanting to shake his hand.The friendly warmth of his greeting remains with me to this day. And to this day this is a book I cannot reread without being deeply stirred and wanting, somehow, to be a better person.
Profile Image for Chris Pratt.
172 reviews5 followers
September 29, 2025
Of all the biographies I’ve read of Presidents of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, this was the most human. I’m not sure if that’s more a result of the book or the man, but it seems to me that Spencer W. Kimball is a paragon of what happens when a good, hard-working person decides to put God first in their life. It’s inspiring to me to see an example of someone’s efforts magnified so much by the Lord.

A big reason this book felt so human was the frequency with which President Kimball expressed fear and anxiety about his own inadequacies. (From a journal entry as a newly-called stake president) “I find I am too weak and too small and too lazy and too inefficient. Maybe they will release me after a year or two. I really hope so.” Also, “thousands of people in the Church are measuring the Church, their Church, by me. They look at me with my smallness, my ineptitudes, my weaknesses, my narrow limitations and say, ‘What a weak church to have such weak leadership.’”

It was also very humanizing to hear some unflattering stories about President Kimball, which aren’t always present in this kind of book.
- (From a letter composed when he was 22) “I like all my Profs fine but [some professor whose name was redacted] and I can’t hardly stand him. Today he had a dirtier shirt than mine.” Another time he referred to someone as a ”buzzard.”
- “[Spencer and Camilla had] occasional disagreements, of course. One summer when Camilla wanted to save their extra cash for a new house and Spencer wanted to travel, they simply did not come to an agreement. So Spencer loaded the car and took the trip alone and had a good time.”
- Spencer’s son, Ed, recalled a time when a cow kicked over the bucket Spencer was using to collect its milk. After the third time knocking over the bucket, “Spencer kicked the cow in the ribs and damned her.”
- When President David O. McKay called Elder J. Reuben Clark to be his second counselor in the First Presidency, after he had served as first counselor for 17 years, Eder Kimball wrote “I was not alone in my bewilderment and devastation. … What fortitude! What courage and self control! What self mastery! How could any mortal take a blow like that and stand?” Such a response is strange to hear, as it suggests a concern with title that seems incongruous with basically every statement I’ve heard about callings in the Church.

Highlights
- (From the diary of Spencer’s wife, Camilla) “I have appreciated [Spencer’s service in the Rotary club, which brought some unwanted notoriety to Camilla] as an opportunity to grow. I have a real ambition to learn to be quietly at ease under any circumstances and in any company, to take my place in a dignified yet simple manner.”
- It’s interesting comparing his call as an Apostle with that of President Hinckley. Elder Kimball’s anguish was so tangible I felt I could relate to him. He felt intensely inadequate, but also guilty for feeling like he could be called as an Apostle (when he first took the call from Salt Lake, before the call had been extended), he wandered to the top of a cliff and “strange thoughts came to me: all this anguish and suffering could be ended so easily from this high cliff and then came to my mind the temptations of the Master when he was tempted to cast Himself down—then I was ashamed for having placed myself in a comparable position and trying to be dramatic.”
- “‘There is no tragedy,’ he wrote, ‘except in sin.’ … Was there tragedy, he asked, in Jesus' death? Life had been sweet to him, too. He, too, had been young. ‘He was taken from his mother, though it broke her heart.’ But ‘would we have had it different? Would we have saved his life, if we could, now that we know that he through this very circumstance brought redemption to the world? Would his agonized mother today have it otherwise as she looks back on the entire program? Would the apostles on whom the burden of the kingdom fell have it otherwise?’ Trust God, then, he urged. There was meaning in the death of this mother's son, too. Her boy ‘was not born for a day, a decade, or a century, but for eternity.’ God, who is his parent also, had taken him home knowing His own eternal purposes.”
- In response to the adulation he sometimes received, his response was “It’s not Spender Kimball but the apostle they honored.”
- “‘The historian has used the white ink to write his stories when he was emphasizing honor and integrity and honesty and glory and heroism,’ he declaimed in a radio address, ‘but when he was emphasizing terror and death and raids and scalpings and betrayals and broken covenants, always it was with bold red ink. ... There has been a prejudiced historian sitting at his desk for 400 years writing the Indian story.’” I tend to view talk about our racist history as belonging solely to the “woke” left (not that our history hasn’t been racist, but that rehashing the past or holding our ancestors up to our current moral standards isn’t a useful exercise). It was helpful for me to hear that.
- “When his friend argued that God as depicted in the Bible was a tyrant,” (which is a thought I’ve had many times!) “Spencer reasoned with him that God’s only ultimate interest was man’s welfare and that only men’s faulty perception obscured the fact.”

cortege, bier, bunting (n.), trellis, curry (v.), chute-the-chute, jitney, valise, catgut, cowpuncher, boondoggle, tamarack, sarape, benignant, chair car, broncobuster, perfidy, cater-corner, jump seat, frowsy, barrister, angina, recreant, entrain, wamble, flophouse, borrow pit, stentorian, jacaranda, besotted, digitalis
Profile Image for David  Cook.
690 reviews
March 9, 2023
This was the first biography I read in 1978. Little did I know then how biographies would become my favorite genre. My mother was a cousin of Elder Kimball through a common great great grandfather. He performed my parents’ marriage when my dad was home on a survivors after his ship had been hit by a kamikaze in the Battle of Midway. My father maintained an a relationship with Pres. Kimball for 30 years.

I later had classes from the author, Edward Kimball, during law school. Ed, a son, authored this, the first biography, and a second one published in 2006. This bio is a comprehensive and engaging account of the life of one of the most influential leaders in the history of the LDS. Spencer Kimball served as the twelfth president of the Church from 1973 until his death in 1985, and his leadership had a profound impact on the Church and its members. Elder Kimball had a history of serious health problems and most thought he would be short-lived “caretaker” president. Boy were they wrong.

This is a detailed portrait of an influential man by an adoring son. However, it is not a fluff piece. Ed Kimball, a law professor, rights in an analytical and honest style. He explores Kimball's early years in Arizona, his mission to Great Britain, his career as a businessman, and his service as a Church leader. Along the way, the book provides fascinating insights into the challenges Kimball faced, his personal strengths and weaknesses, and the events that shaped his leadership style.

The author does an excellent job of situating Kimball's life and leadership within the broader social and political landscape of his time. For example, he explores the impact of the civil rights movement on Kimball's views on race, and he discusses the Church's response to the Vietnam War. Those views would result in a seismic change later in the year the book was published, with the end of the restriction on the ordination of black men to the priesthood. (That event is detailed in the 1985 bio.)

The book also provides an intimate look at Kimball's family life. The author draws on personal letters and other sources to give readers a sense of the man behind the public figure. This includes his deep love for his wife, his devotion to his children and grandchildren, and his struggles with health issues.

Overall, the biography of Spencer Kimball is a well-written and insightful account of an important figure in Church history. It will be of interest to anyone who wants to understand the life and legacy of this influential leader. The book is a testament to the author's skill as a historian and his love for his father.
Profile Image for Mary.
1,296 reviews7 followers
August 25, 2011
I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. It was fascinating, and very inspirational. I had expected it to be a bit dry, but I did not find it to be that way. I love how the authors (Kimball's son and grandson) did not gloss over any areas of his life. Spencer Kimball was very human (especially in his tendency to doubt himself and his struggle to balance work life, church life, and family). But, ultimately, he really appears to be the best sort of human, without any serious flaws. Just the type of person you would want to have as your prophet - humble, loving, and motivated.
Profile Image for Juan Botero.
62 reviews2 followers
April 17, 2020
Un verdadero discípulo

Presidente Kimball es un verdadero discípulo. Durante toda su vida se distinguio por dar lo mejor de sí mismo, yendo al límite muchas veces de sus propias capacidades, pero siempre movido por el deber y el amor por otros.
Profile Image for Alec Bullough.
22 reviews
November 26, 2025
Surprised I didn't review this book already.

Read it years ago as a missionary. It was deeply moving and inspiring to me in a way that is difficult to put into words, and, years later, can still be accounted as one of the most life-changing things I have ever read. I really resonated and connected with it in a way that I have seldom done in anything I've read.

The book is, effectively, a sort of auto-biography where Spencer W. Kimball's son compiled his father's letters, journals, etc. and tells the story of his life up until his calling to be a prophet (as that was then the present day when the book came out). If you've ever wondered what the meetings of the Quorum of the Twelve and the First Presidency look like in the temple, President Kimball goes into interesting detail about those here. There's miracles and unexpected life developments: a mission that is largely unproductive because of disease and illness, or tearful breakdowns on a mountain top in response to Church callings. It's the moving story of a boy who cries at his mother's early demise, of a world war and how it changed everything, of religious persecution on the Navajo Reservation, and even of deep hurt over a comment made in the temple regarding Church priorities. It's an extremely honest and frank look at how the Church works at its top levels, and it's a deeply moving story about a man who drinks the bitter cup over and over again throughout his life and yet is asked to keep moving forward.

I think the reason I speak so highly of this book, aside from how superbly it is written, is because of how much it detonates our understanding of what faithful Church service looks like. There's an extraordinary amount of vulnerability in these pages, and a larger-than-life figure becomes very small before our eyes.

I did not know when I was reading this book as a missionary in what was a particularly brutal and trying part of my mission that I was a couple weeks away from getting informed of my father's terminal cancer diagnosis, and, then, only about a month away from his passing. In hindsight, this book helped give me the strength to endure that difficult period, when I felt truly alone and isolated, and it will always be special to me for that reason.
Profile Image for Alexander Poulsen.
21 reviews4 followers
April 21, 2020
This is a really enjoyable book about a pivotal prophet. Spencer Kimball’s life spans a fascinating part of church history. He grew up in rural Arizona because his dad (who was a son of Heber C. Kimball) was sent to be the second stake president there, before Arizona was even a state yet. The church was still very much a white, mountain west phenomena, but by the time Spencer W Kimball became president of the church, it was a diverse, worldwide church, with a climax in 1978 when he received the revelation on the priesthood (not covered in this book). Key takeaways: Spencer Kimball was a really hard worker his whole life, whether on the farm, in his business, or as an apostle. He routinely worked all day every day, and then would go home and work some more. He also had a great sense of humor, despite (or maybe because of) his hard work ethic. He really cared a lot about people. He could never refuse an opportunity to serve or help someone else--- as he would say, he “belonged to the church”. Lastly, he may have done more than anyone else to take our church from being a white, mountain west church, to being a diverse, global church, where all the children of God are welcome. While he is remembered for the 1978 priesthood revelation, all throughout his life he was concerned about minority groups, and making sure they were welcome in the church. As an apostle he was preaching against racism back in the 1940s, doing work among the Indians, and making sure that people would be able to hear the gospel in their native language.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
712 reviews2 followers
June 22, 2019
I love Spencer W. Kimball... I didn’t love this book.

Obviously I’m in the minority here, but it’s very poorly edited and organized. It was kind of a jumbled mess... No flow whatsoever. Drove me nuts. Also off putting was inclusion of church member’s personal and VERY private interviews with Spencer W. Kimball. This book is a veritable laundry list of people’s sins and trials. Real people. People who poured their hearts out to Spencer W. Kimball... those private interviews are now in lovely print form for the world to enjoy. And their names aren’t always withheld. I think it was terrible bad taste for Ed Kimball to include this to such a large degree in his father’s biography. It’s one thing for Spencer W. Kimball to write these things down in his journal... a whole different thing for them to be in published form. So wrong.

I wanted to rate this two stars, but I don’t fancy being struck by lightning ;)
33 reviews
January 31, 2018
Spencer W. Kimball led a remarkable life. This book, which is rich in detail and remarkably candid, however, is careful to emphasize that President Kimball, the Twelfth President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, was very, very unsure of his ability to accomplish all that he was asked to do. The book, written by one of his sons and one of his grandsons, is full of interesting stories taken directly from President Kimball's diaries together with President Kimball's assessment of his own performance. What struck me is President Kimball's great love and patience for others was matched by his own insecurity and impatience with himself.

The book was well written but, at times, suffered from some awkwardness. Overall, I really liked the book and would recommend it to everyone.
Profile Image for MaryAnne.
1,065 reviews
October 2, 2023
I’m embarrassed to admit that I finally read in 2023 a copy of this book given to me for Christmas by my parents in 1982!! Life got very busy and most of my reading was for school or my career. Now I’m retired and can read through my personal library!

I loved reading about the life of Spencer W. Kimball who was the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter -day Saints 50 years ago. He was the prophet of my youth. I knew he had health issues but not everything described in this book, nor did I know it was constant. What a dedicated servant of the Lord!! My rating reflects the quality of the writing which at times I found confusing, but the contents describing this remarkable man deserves 5+ stars!!
703 reviews
October 18, 2018
Spencer W. Kimball was the twelfth president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The man was considered to be humble, witty, loving, faithful, full of energy and committed to the Lord. Many dramatic events took place in this man's life, and it is all covered in vivid detail. Beloved by his people, he led the Church to greater strides, simply asking its members to "just do it" and to "lengthen one's stride". Written by his two sons, Edward and Andrew Kimball, they give an excellent portrait of the man he truly was. I loved reading about this humble prophet of God.
Profile Image for Brooke.
857 reviews5 followers
September 25, 2023
I Read this sometime in college and was taken back, at the time, with how honest the book was. He was not only a prophet, but human, an amazing person, but this seemed to be a more open look at a prophet. I also remember how moved I was about the story of him milking the cow, after his mother had died, and how he wept! And I loved that once he and his wife took separate vacations because they couldn't agree on how best to spend their time and money!
Profile Image for Adrian Brown.
711 reviews4 followers
June 6, 2025
Although I admire and respect his commitment and faith, and honor him as God's prophet, I'm not sure that I would have liked President Kimball personally. Good thing that he was the prophet of my early childhood so that it never came up!

The writing style here is rushed and cramped. In an effort to include many anecdotes, the stories are often told so briefly that there's not enough context to really appreciate them.
2 reviews
October 18, 2025
Impressive man

There’s no doubt President Kimball was an impressive individual. It’s also clear from this book where a lot of the problems of LDS stem. The perfectionism and pervasive belief that they aren’t enough and must continually prove themselves and earn their blessings is very apparent at the highest levels of leadership. Also, there are tons of typos and gramatical errors. It seems this versions was reformatted and not edited properly before being published.
Profile Image for Spencer Willardson.
432 reviews12 followers
September 30, 2024
President Kimball was the president of the church when I was born and was buried on my 7th birthday. I share his name, although my parents said I wasn't named after him explicitly. I loved learning more about the life of this humble man who wore his life out in the service of God and others. I got tired just reading about all the things he was doing.
Profile Image for Mary.
349 reviews5 followers
February 14, 2025
I love reading biographies of church leaders. This was written by two of President Kimball's sons, and perhaps because of that, I felt like there was a bit more in here of the real, personal experiences that are often (though understandably) missing in many other biographies. I especially enjoyed the detail in the account of what it was like to be called as an apostle.
Profile Image for Dede.
45 reviews2 followers
October 23, 2019
I loved that this was written by family members. They portrayed President Kimball for who he was, an incredible person with human weaknesses, a humanitarian, and a man willing to be prepared by God to be His prophet.
94 reviews
July 7, 2020
I love biographies! It was especially fun to learn about a previous prophet that I previously knew little about. President Kimball endured so much physically while he served as an apostle. It is amazing all that those men give of themselves in their service to the Lord.
434 reviews21 followers
September 19, 2024
I remember hearing him speak when I was a small child. Never knew much about him, but I remember my father talk about him a lot (and the work he did on the reservations).

This was a good experience for me.
180 reviews
July 24, 2017
My first biography of a Church President, I loved this book about his life and it made me want to be a much better person! I am grateful for his life and teachings!
Profile Image for Gentry Mickelsen.
183 reviews3 followers
July 9, 2019
absolutely loved this book! He was truly an amazing man. no matter what your religious beliefs you have to admire his commitment and endurance to keep working, loving, and serving.
Profile Image for Mathew Stucki.
23 reviews
February 11, 2022
I read very few books as a boy really, but when I started Spencer W Kimball's biography, I couldn't put it down. I finished it in a couple days. It spoke then and still does today
Profile Image for Rebecca Reid.
414 reviews39 followers
November 10, 2011
President Kimball’s biography, which was written by two of his sons, Edward and Andrew Kimball, opened my eyes to the sincere, gentle, and kind man he strived to be.

Because his biography was written by his two sons, they provided a personal view of the man who was to be called as prophet. They had access to his many decades of journals, but they also provided insights in the man they grew up with. Obviously, they wrote with love but they wrote with themselves at a distance: I never felt the book was overly sentimental in terms of the authors’ narration. Rather, I think they provided interesting insights from their memory that gave the book depth and interest. Further, they addressed Spencer Kimball’s failings and problems throughout the book: it was not a perfect rosy picture of a perfect man. Instead, as I read, I came to know much better a human who happened to be called to serve his God and who I revere as a prophet in this latter-day age of the world.

More on my blog
Profile Image for Jeanne Young.
96 reviews1 follower
November 5, 2015
A biography that has been on my to read list for 25 years. I wonder if I would have appreciated it as much 25 years ago. I feel like I know Spencer Kimball. I wish I had known him and his wife and called them friends, enjoyed their humor, honesty and wisdom. I learned about the processes of succession in the LDS Church presidency, the origins of "Indian Placement" program and Spencer Kimball's part in trying to get government and Church agencies to deal humanely and decently with Native Americans. As a Mormon, I found a seemingly normal man made extraordinary through his faith, love and concern for others. People not of the same faith will find things to admire in the way he coped with grave and recurring illnesses that should have defeated even the most resilient.
Profile Image for Yakochica.
17 reviews
December 6, 2008
I really like this book for several reasons. Sometimes when biographies are written about great people the authors tend to focus on the strengths and successes and omit the follies and mistakes. This book is written by the children of President Kimball with approval from both Spencer and Camilla so it contains all the mistakes and successes, which brings me to another reason I like it. Pres. Kimball becomes a real person with humor and wit and an affectious personality. The other reason I like it is that the authors pull in some of Camilla's thoughts and experiences giving a more broad view of the events. This is a book to read if you want to feel inspired to be a better person.
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