Presidential Biographies discussion

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General Discussion > Which next? In order - no, but what then?

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message 1: by Eric (new)

Eric Smith (ericleesmith) | 21 comments I am reading the presidents but not in order - no way! - after the Civil War you enter a dark age that last until Teddy, so no, I'm not doing that. I have ready 17 biographies so far, including tough books on McKinnley and Coolidge. In front of me I see books about Tyler, Monroe, and Garfield. The book about Garfield, "Dark Horse," look especially interesting. But I know, it's not hot, but when a good book comes out about a minor president, we must read.


message 2: by Tom (new)

Tom Rowe (spinnerrowe) | 7 comments I'm not going in order either. I tried, but then I would get stuck on some president of whom I could not find a decent bio.


message 3: by Eric (new)

Eric Smith (ericleesmith) | 21 comments Exactly. Follow your interests - there are many presidents who haven't had a major biography in decades.


message 4: by Peter A. (new)

Peter A.  van Tilburg  | 14 comments I fully agree as from my young days I had a bad feeling on LBJ because of the Vietnam war untill I found out later that he


message 5: by Peter A. (new)

Peter A.  van Tilburg  | 14 comments also is responsible for the most extensive social program. I did not read his biography yet nor visited his library but I am looking for his biography. Any suggestions from anyone? Peter from Holland


message 6: by Eric (new)

Eric Smith (ericleesmith) | 21 comments Try the book by Robert Dalleck, his book on Kennedy is great and I bet his Johnson is too.


message 7: by Peter A. (new)

Peter A.  van Tilburg  | 14 comments Any suggestions for a biography on Thomas Jefferson?


message 8: by William (new)

William Mego (willmego) I greatly enjoyed "The Art of Power" by Jon Meacham, at least for a single volume on the man, and recommend it highly.


message 9: by James (last edited Jan 04, 2014 10:02AM) (new)

James Keenley (jkeenley) | 23 comments It's not a traditional biography, it's more of a character study, and it's a bit too uncritical for my taste, but Jon Meacham's "Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power" is an excellent read.


message 10: by Lisa (new)

Lisa | 32 comments I agree, Jon Meacham's "Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power" was a much more enjoyable read on Jefferson than "The Road To Monticello".


message 11: by Legodude1 (new)

Legodude1 | 1 comments I started reading Dumas Malone's series after reading www.bestpresidentialbios.com/2013/05/... and so far so good. Also liked Art of Power btw.


message 12: by Lisa (new)

Lisa | 32 comments Is this your blog? Very nice.

Legodude1 wrote: "I started reading Dumas Malone's series after reading www.bestpresidentialbios.com/2013/05/... and so far so good. Also liked Art of Power btw."


message 13: by William (last edited Jan 06, 2014 07:21AM) (new)

William Mego (willmego) That blog belongs to a gentleman named Steve, who is also on goodreads, and is an EXCELLENT resource.


message 14: by Steve (new)

Steve | 8 comments Thanks for the kind words Lego, Lisa and Will! I'm having a great time reading through my collection of presidential bios and am finding goodreads (and this discussion group in particular) helpful and interesting. And if you've read something great that's missing from my list [ http://bestpresidentialbios.com/curri... ]...please let me know!


message 15: by Steven (new)

Steven (steveng) | 2 comments I just announced that I am challenging myself to read a bio on every president with an eye on learning about their PR strategies and tactics.


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