Increasingly, I have found books that focus on one particular aspect or period of a president's life to be a nice change of pace from the traditional full-length biography (not that there is anything wrong with the latter, because there certainly is not). By honing in on an event or specific place of importance, one may be able to better identify a turning point in the life of someone before he (so far) achieved the highest office in the land. So it is with James Tobin's excellent study of the severe polio attack suffered by a highly energetic and relatively youthful Franklin D. Roosevelt. Tobin seeks to determine, as best anyone can, the profound impact that the crippling disease had on Roosevelt, how it changed him, and what it taught him. The result is informative and entertaining, being neither a dry clinical narrative nor a series of unsubstantiated assumptions.
Tobin begins by taking us to Inauguration Day, March 4, 1933 – describing the elaborate series of actions that Roosevelt had to go through in order to be able to stand up and then “walk”. He then very briefly reviews FDR's early life, going almost immediately to summer 1921 when FDR was stricken with polio. He interweaves medical discussion about the polio virus and how it is communicated between people with snippets of FDR's exact movements over the course of several weeks in July and August 1921. He writes so well that for awhile it almost seems like fiction, following the virus around as it somehow gets into FDR's body, then proceeds to attack his cells. Tobin writes that, realistically, the chances of it affecting FDR the way it did were extremely small. Despite there having been recent outbreaks of the disease, most people were able to fight it off; indeed, most probably never knew that it passed through their bodies as they have had no more than a cold or a fever for a few days.
While I am familiar with the basic conclusion that FDR most likely got the virus from his attendance at a Boy Scout picnic in a New York state park, Tobin makes sure to note other things that have been commonly overlooked by most FDR biographers. Based on how he was raised, FDR was more susceptible to the virus. This is because he never attended any public schools where he could be exposed to and thus immunized against many of the germs that always float around such places. He was raised in an isolated environment with private tutors, and he had few childhood friends. Also, his physical constitution was never robust: he was someone who frequently got sick, even after he grew into adulthood. Another key factor at play here was that he was exhausted, having recently been consumed with defending himself over events that occurred in the Navy Department back when he was the Assistant Secretary. And finally, when the disease struck him full-force, being on Campobello Island which is past the eastern edge of Maine, he was way away from the best medical care, especially in those days before air travel. All of these these factored in enormously in FDR being vulnerable to getting polio in the first place, not being able to fight it off in the second place, and not having top-notch medical care until it was way too late to try to correct any damage (which may not have been possible, but will never be known).
Once FDR is afflicted, Tobin turns to examining how he tried to cope with his paralysis. Physically, he only improved slightly (as far as his legs were concerned – thankfully he retained full feeling and use above his hips), and that mainly from when he went swimming and sunbathing in warmer climates. Tobin notes how Roosevelt alternated between trying to work hard at being able to walk again, to just not really trying once he had built up his upper body. It seems that, at some unknown point, FDR came to realize that he never was going to walk unaided again, and that he would never fully be able to stand on his own power unless he was in a pool of warm water. Yet he went through with plans to buy the grounds of Warm Springs, GA. One wonders if this was as much something for FDR to focus on as far as the ownership and management of the entire complex was concerned, as it was about trying to recover more movement in his legs.
Louis Howe, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Sara Roosevelt are featured prominently in this tale. Howe, Roosevelt's political guru, kept Roosevelt's name alive in political circles, and while not outright lying about his condition, was able to spin things so that people either forgot or most likely didn't think about FDR's affliction. Eleanor was crucial in getting FDR through the first few weeks, and then months, of his illness. One wonders if he would have even made it without her help. Probably not. And Sara, his mother, while providing financial stability, was nonetheless an irritant as she basically wanted FDR to return to his boyhood home of Hyde Park and live the remainder of his life as a semi-invalid country squire. FDR, Eleanor, and Howe were having none of that.
Al Smith also becomes a major player later on in this book. The New York Governor pressures FDR to run to replace him in 1928. FDR does and wins, and his relationship with Smith – never personally close to begin with – deteriorates rapidly. At this point, Tobin speeds up and quickly brings us up to FDR's election as President in 1932. Very little attention is paid to his years in Albany, except to show that FDR managed to do the job of Governor just fine with no issues resulting from his relative immobility. He concludes with a very good epilogue about whether FDR would still have been president had he not contracted polio, and how his triumph in being able to work his way back at least partially from his affliction may have led him to make a terrible mistake in running for reelection in 1944, when he knew he was gravely ill with heart disease.
This book is best for those who are at least somewhat familiar with FDR's life and his presidency. Not that someone who is unfamiliar will not be able to follow it, but rather that reader would be lacking the necessary context and understanding of both FDR's privileged childhood, his personality, and his policies that he instituted while president in order to better appreciate the point that Tobin attempts to convey: that FDR was somewhat of a callous and selfish man whose life was dramatically upended; someone who was used to doing things that he wanted to do (for the most part) but who suddenly had to rely on others for basic needs; someone who for the first time faced intense struggle – both physically and emotionally; and finally, someone whose tribulations helped him ultimately become America's longest-serving president and an advocate for those who were less fortunate in life. Anyone interested in FDR will almost surely find Tobin's book a well-balanced look at probably the most critical period of FDR's life.
Grade: A