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Auchincloss, Louis

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The Rough Writer

The Rough Writer

In an article that originally appeared in the New York Sun, John A. Gable reviews two volumes of Theodore Roosevelt’s writings published by the Library of America. Gable asserts that The Rough Riders is a classic combat memoir, and he admits that Roosevelt’s An Autobiography disappoints in its coverage of Roosevelt’s presidency. Gable expresses frustration with the volume of Letters and Speeches because it contains only items that have been previously published while so many interesting Roosevelt letters remain unpublished and unknown. In addition to the reprinted review essay, the section features a text box labeled “What TR Wrote” in which Gable lists the various editions of Roosevelt’s works that are still in print.

The covers of both volumes from the Library of America appear at the center of the review, and a photograph of Gable with Jonathan Roosevelt appears at the section’s conclusion.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

Book Reviews

Book Reviews

Twelve books compete for space and attention in this crowded edition of the “Book Reviews” section which includes four feature reviews, two brief children’s book reviews, and notices about six other titles. Matthew Glover counters some of the assertions made by Louis Auchincloss in his Theodore Roosevelt by citing the work of historian John Milton Cooper. John A. Gable provides profiles of Alice Roosevelt Longworth and Eleanor Roosevelt, the subjects of Linda Donn’s The Roosevelt Cousins, and he notes the outsize influence that Theodore Roosevelt had on the extended Roosevelt clan. An anonymous review of Theodore Roosevelt, the U.S. Navy, and the Spanish-American War lists the nine chapters that resulted from a conference of the same name, and it notes some of the authors’ ties to the Theodore Roosevelt Association. 

 

Gable identifies four themes found in the ten essays that make up European Perceptions of the Spanish-American War of 1898, including most European nations’ hostility to the United States in the conflict, and he emphasizes the role played by the Roosevelt Study Center in fostering the emergence of a cohort of European scholars of American history. Two books aimed at children are reviewed in the “Kids Corner” section, and “Other New Books” highlights six titles published in 2001-2002, including new paperback editions of the Roosevelt biographies written by Edmund Morris and his wife Sylvia Jukes Morris. 

Book Reviews

Book Reviews

John A. Gable reviews two works in the “Book Reviews” section. Gable praises James B. Reckner’s history of the Great White Fleet and notes that the work favors the military and technological aspects of the cruise, and he emphasizes that the cruise served as an important test for the navy in many respects. Gable also favors Louis Auchincloss’s The Vanderbilt Era: Profiles of a Gilded Age which looks at how the fortune of the Vanderbilt family helped shape American art and architecture in a quest to create an “American Renaissance.”

Two photographs appear in the section: one of Reckner and one of the USS Theodore Roosevelt underway in the Mediterranean Sea with other ships of her battle group and planes from her air wing.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal