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(Paperback)
A vivid portrait of the election that shaped modern America
Pietrusza's (Rothstein) chronicle of the presidential election of 1920 is absorbing, despite the subtitle's rather tangential claim that the election involved six men who had served or would serve as president: Harding, Wilson, Coolidge, Hoover and both Roosevelts (though Teddy had died in 1919). This book isn't really about them, nor is it merely the story of one electoral race. Rather, Pietrusza is telling a grander tale, of a country toppling into "modernity, or what passed for it." In 1920, the automobile had overtaken the horse, jazz and the fox-trot were replacing the camp meeting as popular entertainment, people were learning to buy on installment, and more and more of those fox-trotting shoppers lived in cities. Presidential candidates, for the first time, courted women voters. (Democrat Cox was divorced, which was expected to play badly with the fairer sex.) Both parties waffled on the so-called race question, seeking black votes while either tacitly or explicitly endorsing white supremacy. Given Harding's electoral victory and death during his term, Pietrusza could have devoted more space to the abiding importance of this election. All in all, Pietrusza has produced a broad, satisfying political and social history, in the style of Doris Kearns Goodwin. 16 pages of b&w illus. (Feb. 7) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsDavid Pietrusza, CASEY Award winner, has authored or edited over thirty books. His Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius who Fixed the 1919 World Series was nominated for the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award in the Best Fact Crime category. He lives in upstate New York.
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March 16, 2009: A brisk read about the intersection of the political careers of six past and future U.S. presidents. Pietrusza does a marvelous job of bringing the year 1920 to life and contrasting the politics of the early 1900's with conventions and elections from our recent past and present. Intrigue, scandal, and luck mix with the contentious political scene of the era for an important history lesson and a pleasurable read. This is a thought provoking book about an election that is often dismissed as being irrelevant, or at the very least unfortunate. Pietrusza shows it to mean so much more, as the country (both sexes!) goes to the polls for a referendum on The League of Nations, U.S. involvement in World War I, prohibition, socialism, and the Wilson Era of American politics.
I enjoyed the book so much I even visited the Warren G. Harding Memorial in Marion, Ohio. An impressive tomb for a man of many, many contradictions! Read the book and reflect on how the media has changed the way it reports on (some) candidates in this day and age!Reader Rating:
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January 03, 2009: I tought it's very well based on the year on the election 1920 and gave well based childhood and growing up facts too.the picture were amazing to see .I bet if you put my 7th grade social studies teachter mr.steve schockcow vs david peitrusza in a histroy bee it would be tight.