Presidents Books


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Related Subjects: Washington, George Adams, John Jefferson, Thomas Lincoln, Abraham Madison, James Monroe, James Adams, John Quincy Jackson, Andrew Van Buren, Martin Harrison, William Henry Tyler, John Polk, James Knox Taylor, Zachary Fillmore, Millard Pierce, Franklin Buchanan, James Johnson, Andrew Grant, Ulysses Simpson Hayes, Rutherford Birchard Garfield, James Abram Arthur, Chester Alan Harrison, Benjamin Truman, Harry S McKinley, William Taft, William Howard Roosevelt, Theodore Wilson, Thomas Woodrow Bush, George Walker Harding, Warren Gamaliel Coolidge, John Calvin Hoover, Herbert Clark Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Eisenhower, Dwight David Nixon, Richard Milhous Ford, Gerald Rudolph Carter, James Earl Reagan, Ronald Wilson Bush, George Herbert Walker Clinton, William Jefferson Johnson, Lyndon Baines Kennedy, John Fitzgerald
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Presidents Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Presidents
Grant Takes Command: 1863 - 1865
Published in Paperback by Back Bay Books (1990-04-18)
Author: Bruce Catton
List price: $24.99
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Collectible price: $24.99

Average review score:

Excellent history of Grant's Union Army Command
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-25
This is a well-researched account of the last two years of the Civil War (1863-1865). The harsh realities of the battles and living conditions are especially given great detail here. The final days of the war and the surrender of General Lee are extremely poignant as the author examines the tattered remains of the once invincible Army of Northern Virginia. The exchange between the victors and the vanquished at Appomattox is the highlight of the book. The author also takes pains not to overlook any of Grant's military blunders such as Cold Harbor and gives an even-handed viewpoint throughout. I recommend this book for anyone who is interested in the darkest days of our nation's history.

Grant, The Key to Lincoln's Problem
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-26
In this superb second volume on Grant's war-time service, Bruce Catton shows how Grant devised and executed the grand strategy that ensured we'd be one country.

Beginning at Chattanooga, Catton chronicles Grant's successful battle to save a beleaguered federal army there and his selection as head of all of the armies of the Union.

The strategic plan, the overland campaign, the investiture of Petersburg and the finale with Lee at Appomattox are chronicled well.

What Catton does very well here is focus on Grant the General-in-Chief. We see how Lincoln and Grant are drawn toward each other through a shared and fundamental understanding of what it would take to win the war and the will to do it -- incredibly a trait Lincoln could find in no other General selected to head the Army of the Potomac.

The actual management of the Union's armies and efforts is given great attention. Even the Civil War devotee who knows a lot about the battles of the war will appreciate this focus on grand strategy, army management and the particular and singular attributes possessed by Grant to manage the affair to a successful conclusion.

A wonderful book, as is it's predecessor, "Grant Moves South."

At Last, A Winning Commander for Lincoln
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-03
"Grant Takes Command" is the second of two volumes by Bruce Catton on Grant's Civil War service and the third volume of a trilogy on Grant's military career (beginning with Lloyd Lewis's "Captain Sam Grant"). However, this volume can easily be ready by itself. Catton picks up the story in the fall of 1863 with Grant's successful raising of the siege of Chanttanooga, following which President Lincoln picks him for a third star and command of all the Union armies.

Grant is the latest in a long series of Union commanders, most of whom have been badly beaten by General Robert E. Lee and his Army of Northern Virginia, and none of whom have been able to bring superior Northern resources effectively to bear on a slowly weakening Confederacy. In fact, as Grant takes command, the war has not yet been won and could still be lost.

Grant will be the commander that Lincoln has long sought. Lincoln's telling exchange with an aide, repeated by Catton, lays out why. Grant is the first general to take the supreme command who will work in harness with Lincoln and in full acceptance of Lincoln's constraints as President of a democracy in the midst of a civil war. Grant is prepared to take full responsibility for the conduct of the missions of the armies, and without setting up an alibi in advance for possible failure. And as it becomes apparent in the course of Catton's absolutely superb narrative, Grant understands the terrible math. Lee and his army are too proficient to be easily beaten; great persistance will be called for. Grant grasps the essential truth that Lee's army is the Confederate center of gravity, and the corallary that Lee's requirement to protect Richmond ultimately limits his ability to maneuver. Further, Grant is able to cause the Union armies to work at a common design, denying Lee the ability to reinforce Virginia by drawing on other theaters of war. The result will be a long, grinding, and exceedingly bloody campaign stretching from 1864 into 1865, as Lee's army is slowly bludgeoned to death.

Catton's narrative does not spare Grant his errors; in the 1864 campaign, Grant underestimates both Lee's abilities as a general and the difficulties of conducting campaigns on such a huge scale. Grant has to learn the job of Army commander in chief on the move; the unnecessary casualties of Cold Harbor and the repeated failures to flank Lee out of position in Virginia are proof of the learning curve. But Grant's great gift is his refusal to be deterred from his objective; he pins Lee at Petersburg and uses the Union armies of Sherman and Sheridan, among others, to destroy the Confederacy's means to make war.

"Grant Takes Command" was first published in 1960, and the details of the history of the Civil War have evolved since then. However, Catton's prose has stood the test of time. This is a truly magnificently told story on an epic scale and a highly recommended treat for the Civil War enthusiast and the casual reader alike.

A change in focus-Grant takes the reins
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-23
A change in Focus--Grant takes the Reins

Until 1864, the Army of the Potomac had never won a campaign. Each Union attempt to capture Richmond drove south, was repulsed, withdrew to Washington, found a new general, and tried again. After his successes at Vicksburg and Chattanooga, Grant came east to a promotion, to general in charge of all Union Armies.

Grant brought a different focus, and Catton defines this superbly in this book, drawing on many of Grant's memoranda to other officers, as well as President Lincoln. Catton captures the essence of a Grant campaign: hold on to the enemy, grasp and retain the initiative, and always move your logistics aggresively forward.

Catton also tries, albeit weakley, to show that Grant was not a "pure" attritionist. He offers examples of Grant's desires to push west and sever Richmond from the Shenandoah. Catton explores the political reality of uncovering Washington to a Confederate thrust, while attacking the logistics that sustained Confederate armies, while Sherman simultaneously attacked Atlanta and its strategic railhead. Catton states that after the battle of Cold Harbor Ggrant's numerical superiority was at its lowest level, but he does not provide the hard math to support this stance. On the other hand, Catton shows well the manuever warfare used by Grant to slip away after Cold Harbor, steal a march, and get across the James River before Lee, stripped of his cavalry, could discover the move and react.

This book does a very solid job of capturing Grant's determination, his unyielding efforts to impose his will on the leaders and staff of the Army of the Potomac, and to integrate the political realities of volunteers, political appointee generals and a presidential election with the cold hard reality of constant campaigning.

A good read not just for students of the martial art, but for any leader who must address the Sisyphean task of invigorating old "we've always done it that way" people with a new ethos and drive.

Clear history of Grant's achievements
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-25
It is almost amazing that even after nearly 40 years, this book still stand the test of time as one of the best studies of General U.S. Grant's tenure as the military commander of all Federal forces. The book starts off from the Chattanooga campaign in late 1863 and moving on to his promotion as overall commander and his attachment to the Army of the Potomac for the rest of the war. By this move he clearly determined that General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia will be his primary target and a key to overall victory for the Union. Bruce Catton does a wonderful job in narrating each event in a clear and colorful way that make this book a joy to read.

Best part of Catton's writing is the way he make individual characters stand out in a way that most pertaining to the event at hand. We understand how Lincoln and Grant bonded so well, how even Meade and Grant worked well on surface and why Grant kept his eye on the ball when grinding Lee down to earth.

This book is a follow-up to Catton's earlier work, Grant Moves South which was published 7 years prior to this book and captured Grant's military activities from the beginning of the war to end of the Vicksburg campaign in 1863. As part of the two book set, Bruce Catton continued to captured the essence of Grant's military chronicles with clarity and understanding that any reader can appreciate.

For anyone interested in the American Civil War, this book is sure to be part of your mandatory reading material and the best part is that its really is a great reading book.

Presidents
Happy Endings (Windsor Selections)
Published in Hardcover by Chivers North Amer (1992-12)
Author:
List price:
Used price: $12.27

Average review score:

Nearly Perfect Story!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-29
There are lots of characters to loathe and love in this one. Derek, Holly Elliot's stepfather was a real brute. Being in the army, Derek was able to prevent Holly's father from leaving Vietnam. If Derek had been in the Marine Corps, he would never have pulled this off. A Marine would not have left a dead or wounded man behind to die, no matter how close the enemy was!

Jason Cole was every girl's dream man, one of the few KS heros with no flaws. His quick intelligence allowed him to see the real Holly within moments of meeting her. Both were beautiful, smart, and in love. But, Holly had a lot of gall getting angry at Jason when if not for him, she might never have known her father's fate! She was darn lucky he cared enough to get involved! He went through his own emotional battle over this, too!

Raven was a wonderful girl who deserved much happiness. Nicholas was fine, handsome, and totally in love with her. But towards the end, there was a scene where he was furious with Raven and spoke pretty ugly to her, then upon realizing his mistake, he's back 'in love' with her. His lack of trust in her wasn't even an issue. I wouldn't have dismissed the incident so easily.

Lawrence and Caroline were also a fine couple, but KS turned Lawrence into another one of her overly sensitive, sappy, soft men, like Rafe in STAR LIGHT, STAR BRIGHT. What a mush he was!

Beautiful heartbreaking-yet-fairy-tale-ending love story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-25
This was the first Katherine Stone novel that I read and it is one of the most moving and beautiful romance novels I have ever encountered. The two primary characters, Raven and Lauren/Holly, are among my favorites in fiction. Both are seriously wounded spiritually but are amazing survivors who never give up on the hope or dream of love. Their stories are emotionally gripping, and for readers who love to go though the maelstrom of emotions, this is a terrific choice. I highly recommend it. I have read almost all of Kathernine Stone's other novels, but this is the best and most satisfying.

WONDERFUL LOVE STORIES - 3 LOVELY COUPLES
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-16
Raven Winters, high profile attorney to the stars, is beautiful, rich and longing for someone to love her. She engages in many sexual affairs from the time she was 13 to the present. Her sex partners have told her she has ice in her veins. What they do not know is that Raven has been longing for someone to love her, truly love her. While jogging she meets Nicholas Gault--well doesn't really meet him, he almost runs over her. There romance proceeds from here. Raven thinks Nick is a landscape gardener and he doesn't tell her different--that actually he is a multimillionaire. They love, she meets his children (he's divorced)and she hopes he truly loves her. Read on.

Story two is multi Academy Award winner both as an actor and as a director, Jason Cole. He will be directing and starring in the story titled "Gift of Love" written by Lauren Sinclair. Lauren does not want Cole to change the ending to her story. Jason agrees to meet with reclusive writer, Lauren, and Raven. After 17 years away from the states, well renowned writer, Lauren agrees to travel from her home in Klondike, Alaska and meet with Jason. Lauren is carrying a lot of baggage from the past. When they meet something develops between Jason and Lauren. Lauren's real name is Holly Elliott and she has much tragedy in her life. Many wonderful things happen between Holly and Jason and all beautiful.

Lawrence Elliott meets lovely, rich Carolyn Hawthorne while cleaning animals caught in the "Valdez" oil spill. An attachment forms and soon, they fall in love. Read how these stories entwine and enjoy this warm, tragedy filled novel with "Happy Endings".

The BEST of Katherine Stone, by far!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1997-08-01
This is the best Katherine Stone novel yet!! I could read this book over and over again, and still find love, hope and happiness on every page!! Everyone who I've lent this book to, has cried and said that it was FANTASTIC!! You must read it!!! You can not put it down until you finish it!!

Great Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-06
I just finished this book yesterday and it was one of those that you can't put down. Raven is a wealthy and succesful entertainment lawyer who has searched for love and never came out ahead. Holly is a romance author who is hiding from reality. Nick is a single dad that is trying to protect his family and heart. Jason is a actor/director/producer who has bought the rights to one of Holly's books. Holly doesn't want him to change it even though he has a right to. They are all connected enough to maintain in the same story but it is like reading 2 or 3 different stories within one book. You would think it would be somewhat confusing trying to keep track of who is connected to who and how but in this book it flows so smoothly that you don't even really think about it. This book is a romance without all the explicit love scenes but it isn't just a romance it's about the characters finding themselves and helping each other.

Presidents
Henry for President
Published in Paperback by CreateSpace (2008-06-27)
Author: Henry Nicols
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.95

Average review score:

I would be voting for Henry !
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-04
Having been fortunate enough to personally know Henry Nichols and his family I feel that his father, Hank, did a wonderful job of portraying the love and support that was a part of their everyday lives in the face of the tremendous hardships that were a part of Henry's life. Henry was a brave,interesting and fun young man who showed the world that we can overcome great fears and live our lives to the utmost from climbing mountains to enjoying good food. He attended our daughter's birthday party just days before his accident and we still remember how he stationed himself at the fondue table and had the best time partaking of everything from cheese to chocolate and wanting the recipes !

Henry's life and his family's undaunting spirit would surely be an inspiration to anyone who reads this book.

Touching Story of Courage and Leadership
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-24
I find it to be an exceptional, moving, revealing story about Henry, his family, and the extreme challenges of dealing with a relentless disease.
From his childhood antics to his humor and his courage, Henry comes across as a wonderful and exceptional human being.
He knew who he was and what he wanted to contribute in spite of the raw deal handed to him. He took the unlikely and risky path of revealing his story about AIDS. The Boy Scout turned Eagle Scout chose to become an AIDS activist, first on home ground and, ultimately, across the world. His story is a tear-jerker. But it also is a testament to how exceptional people deal with exceptional challenges.
An uplifting message at the end helps bring Henry's story full circle. The message provides much-welcomed balance and perspective to an emotional, tragic, heart-wrenching story of a life lived well in spite of it all.

Creating a legacy is of great importance.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
This book leaves a wonderful legacy for Henry Nicols and the entire Nicols family. For those of us who knew Henry and his family, the book does a wonderful job of recalling the love, courage and strength this family obtained from each other and gave to the rest of the world. For those who might not have been privileged to know Henry or the family, the legacy story inspires everyone to make a difference and to change the world in which we live. In my opinion, Henry Nicols embodied great characteristics that would make a wonderful President of our great country and we need that type of leadership now and into our future. I would recommend this book to everyone and will purchase copies to give to my family and friends. Everyone should read this book. Thanks you Hank for writing this story.

A Mesmerizing Tale of Courage, Love and Family.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
It is seldom that I am able to immerse myself in a book for more than an hour at a time. However, last night I laid on the sofa and began to read "Henry for President" and at 12:30 a.m. I had completed it. What a mesmerizing, gut-wrenching and inspirational account of not only Henry's remarkable life but of the amazing strength, love and courage of his entire family. I simply could not put it down! How this family made it through so many years of anguish is incomprehensible but the bond of this family made me long for a more personal relationship with my own children. Each chapter had me thinking I could be a better father and had me wondering how to make up for lost time with them. It also made me realize just how fortunate I am to have four healthy offspring.

Thank you Mr. Nichols, for writing Henry's story and sharing it with the world. I know it will change lives as it has mine.

A Moving Memoir--a must read,
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-29
A Moving Memoir--a must read, June 29, 2008
By Dr. Susan Baum (Storrs, CT USA) - See all my reviews


This is a father's touching tale about living with a child suffering from a fatal disease. At 10 years old, Henry contracted AIDS as the result of the many transfusions he received in response to his having hemophilia. At that time no one would associate with someone who was afflicted with HIV. Nicols weaves a poignant story of how his family bonded together to make Henry's short life meaningful and worthwhile. Henry for President is a tear jerker you won't want to put down. Readers will be inspired by the love and compassion of a special family who helped Henry convince the world that AIDS should not be feared and that understanding would provide hope for AIDS patients everywhere.

Presidents
Herndon's Lincoln: The True Story of a Great Life
Published in Paperback by Digital Scanning (2001-03)
Author: W. M. H. Herndon
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

Great Personal Recollection of Honest Abe
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
Book is true of facts and shows the true Abraham Lincoln. One of the best books on honest Abe. Takes you back to a time long passed and puts you in the mind of one of the true patriots of America.

REVIEW OF WILLIAM H. HERNDON'S LINCOLN BY JOHN CHUCKMAN
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-24
With a certain group of American historians, largely those concerned with preserving images of America's founders and luminaries as saintly figures in white plaster togas, this book remains controversial.

In fact, it is perhaps the greatest biography of an American historical figure ever written. It is recommended highly to all lovers of good biography. It is indispensible to serious students of American history.

The official defenders of America's Civic Religion dislike this book because it captures some raw and awkward aspects of Lincoln, but Lincoln was rather raw and awkward and self-taught. It is the rise of such a man to such heights, plus his great natural eloquence, that make Lincoln remarkable.

Such historians love to cite this or that relatively insignificant error (in a 500-page book replete with details) to discredit Herndon, but Herndon's own detail and sense of honesty make him the best argument against such foolishness.

No one was better qualified than Herndon to record the life of Lincoln, having been his friend and business partner for many years. Herndon also conscientiously compiled a large archive of letters and memorials after Lincoln's death.

Herndon focuses on the personal Lincoln, and it is especially his observations about Lincoln's religious skepticism and family life that so disturb those who would have Lincoln embalmed like Lenin. Herndon gives us a vivid Lincoln, and if you like good biography, you will be impressed. The book was clearly a labor of love, and that fact still comes through more than a century after it was written.

Interesting Perspective of Lincoln
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-25
You know its funny to be writing a review about a book that was written so long ago, but I think this review may help encourage others who haven't already been acquainted with this wonderful book to take a look at it. It offers a very human view of Lincoln before he became the president of the United States. I agree with the fact that it doesn't reveal a lot about the civil war, but you know what, that was the authors intention. William Herndon, Lincoln's Law partner for about 20 years, knew that other people were going to focus on the war years far better than he could (Like John Hay and John Nicolay who worked for Lincoln in the White House) therefore, his focus is to reveal Lincoln as he was as a young man, but mostly during his years living in springfield, illinois. Its really quite entertaining, and at times comical to read how quirky he was back in those days. Sure, Herndon has been criticized about his biography over the past 100 plus years its been out in circulation, particularly his whole take on the Ann Rutledge affair and attitude on Mary Todd Lincoln. Regardless of that, I think he honestly attempts to provide an accurate portrayal of Lincoln without holding back any details. He wants to reveal Lincoln the way he viewed the man through his own eyes--as an ordinary man who had faults like anybody else--who went through tough, turbulent, and dark times--had a sense of humor--had insecurities--but in the end remained an honest to goodness human being who struggled to make his mark in this world. Trust me folks, this is a fascinating read. You will have a difficult time trying to stop reading.

One and Only
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-07
There are, it is said, more books about Lincoln than there are about anybody but Jesus. Every man setting out to write about Lincoln has an idea of him, a shadow to look for Lincoln in and the huge weight of tradition and history on his back while writing. Even Nicolay and Hay, his secretaries, and authors of the voluminous collected papers which are probably the best source on the Presidency, only knew the man in office, once he had enfolded himself, if you will, inside his great ambition. Herndon knew the man. He shared his office with him, a law practise which consisted of Lincoln throwing the case notes and money into his hat before putting it on to his head, and splitting all the money down the middle. Herndon also went around talking to everyone who knew Lincoln while he was alive before they died.

There are flaws to this book. Herndon drank, so Lincoln didn't take him to Washington with him. This book tells you nothing about the war, about Lincoln's policies, or even a great deal about Lincoln's debates with Douglas, say. But. And it is a great but. This is the only book that gives you a smell of the goofy, tall, funny, awkward, galumphing and generally likeable oddball that emerged as the greatest leader this country ever had. This is the only book I would advise an actor to read if he was going to undertake to play Abe Lincoln. All the other books describe a monument. This one describes a man who went on dates, told dirty jokes and had a funny way of laying his legs across the desk and reading upside down. The rest is second hand.

The True Story
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-19
I had long wanted to own a hardcover edition of Herndon's famous book on Abraham Lincoln and the purchase of this one by Digital Scanning, Inc. fulfilled my desire perfectly.

Everyone with a serious interest in Mr. Lincoln's life should read this book. Originally published in 1888, it is one of the main starting points for all subsequent works devoted to understanding this complex man. It remains a great book for reading after all of these years.

Presidents
The Impossible Patriotism Project
Published in Hardcover by Dial (2007-05-10)
Author: Linda Skeers
List price: $16.99
New price: $6.71
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Average review score:

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-12
This is a great book! It addresses an important, yet abstract idea - patriotism - in a way that not only makes it understandable to kids, but enjoyable. Kids will be drawn into the story by relating to the individual students and their project ideas, and will sympathize with Caleb and his lack of inspiration. The text clips along well with many opportunities for chuckles, and the lively illustrations add humorous details kids will enjoy discovering. Beware parents - you may be so busy enjoying the book right along with your child that the tears this book can bring to your eyes may catch you off guard. To be able to laugh and cry in less than 1,000 words - kudos to Ms. Skeers.

Genuine article
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
This is a great book about a great subject. It is well-written with humor and authenticity. It manages to convey a touching message without being preachy or overdone, something few books do well. It is a wonderful book to share with kids and to enjoy yourself. Keep a kleenex on hand. =)

Patriotism in a Positive Light
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
With all the media attention to what the United States "shouldn't" be doing, it's wonderful to find a children's story that shows what patriotism is and who the real patriots are. Make sure your local library has this book - especially for story hour. It's not just for the 4th of July but all year long. The United States is a free country with freedom of speech because men and women were willing to risk their lives to keep it free and to help those in other countries who can't fight for themselves.

The whole story and the great illustrations make this a "must have" book for any child's book collection - or for their parents' too!

Red, White, and Blue, the best colors ever.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-24
I was a story time librarian for 12 years at our local library. Every July, I searched for books I could read to young children that would let them know how wonderful it is to live in America. It is wonderful because we are free. I wanted to read books that would tell the story behind our celebrations of Independence Day and Memorial Day. The Impossible Patriotism Project is that book. This book shows throught text and art the various icons we associate with freedom along with the people who work to keep us free, namely the men and women in our armed forces. Mrs. Skeers and Mr. Hoyt have done a tremendous job conveying the idea of being a patriot to young children. I love it!

If this one doesn't make you tears come to your eyes...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-11
If this one doesn't make tears come to your eyes than your heart must be made of stone.

The beautiful thing about childrens books is that they can play straight to the heart - and this one does. My daughter liked it, but every grown-up who has seen this book has cried or at least teared up. Don't get this one for your kid - get it for you. Moving, wonderful and based on a true story which is just as moving (see back inside flap).

Presidents
JFK Remembered
Published in Hardcover by Random House (1993-09-21)
Author: Jacques Lowe
List price: $37.50
New price: $32.18
Used price: $1.25
Collectible price: $37.50

Average review score:

This was the 1st Pictorial Book I'd Seen of the Kennedy's
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-09
It's also the best I own all of them and let me tell you this is a good buy. I bought it in the marketplace for $3.77, most places want to sell it for over $30. The way the pictures are laid out in the book it's as if the photographer is telling a story w/ pictures. Amazing, absolutely amazing.

JFK and Jackie were two incredibly photgenic people
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-23
After over forty years, the JFK mystique is still with us, tempered and expanded over the course of time. There are two main themes that strike you when reading this book. The first is that in the initial stages of his campaign for President in 1960, JFK did not generate a great deal of interest. He toured the primary states and in some cases addressed very hostile crowds. In other cases, it was a misnomer to describe his audience as a crowd. However, he persevered and by the end of the campaign the crowds to see and hear him were enormous. His was the last successful presidential campaign that began at the bottom and was not carefully orchestrated with the aid of political handlers.
The second main theme is how incredibly photogenic John Kennedy and his wife were. Not only were they beautiful people, but they were people whose good looks survived the often-harsh reality of the camera. While some of these pictures were posed, most were not and yet both of them still maintain a certain regal quality. Pictures with a small amount of explanatory text cannot truly do historical justice to the Kennedy presidency. However, this book is literally and figuratively a snapshot of his presidency and therefore is of historical interest.

WONDERFUL
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-08
A beautiful book on the former first family. The perfect book to share with family and friends. Highly recommended!!!!!! FOR QUESTIONS OR DISCUSSIONS ON JACKIE ONASSIS, PLEAE E-MAIL ME AT MellissaLD@aol.com. HOPE TO HEAR FROM YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!

brilliant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-28
The text are complete, and there are a lot of rare and cute photos. The book tells about Jack, Jackie and bobby so it's great. I suggest it too all Kennedy fans. I enjoyed it.

The President
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-12
I'm an italian student in Economy and I'm a great fan of Jfk. Probably I think this is one of the best book I have ever read. The photos are very nice and the text of Schlesinger is very interesting.

Presidents
The John F Kennedys
Published in Hardcover by Random House Value Publishing (1983-10-12)
Author: Rh Value Publishing
List price: $2.99
Used price: $0.45
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Average review score:

I love it so much!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-11
I am a fan of the Kennedys and I love this book! It is just pictures...pictures...pictures! It is so wonderful! I had to wait 6 long days for it to come to my house. But it was worth it! I love all of the photographs of Caroline as a 2 year old at the beach playing with her parents. I also like the ones of John at the beach with his mother.
This book is wonderful. And I love it. If you buy it, it is worth the money! I paid 12 dollars for it! Mark Shaw did a good job!!!

A KEEPER
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-22
Many memories, and brings much sadness at the same time- I have my book from earlier print from the 1960's - with this latest event it is even more of a keeper- by the way who is the publisher now.- mine was Ambassador Books Canada- and printed by Sanders printing Corp, NY. Do you know if the eariler editions are more valuable? any response would be appreciated.

The John F. Kennedys : A Family Album.
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-21
Mark Shaw's photographs capture the idyllic moments of John, Jackie, Caroline and John Jr., whether at play in the White House or laughing together on a Cape Cod beach. The simple yet stunning photos of this famous foursome will be as familiar to you as your own family photo album.

To those who were there when John Kennedy was in the White House, this book will serve as a touching remembrance and to people who know about the Kennedys from just a historical standpoint, the photos and words will provide a more personal glimpse into the years that are commonly referred to as the Camelot era. Richard Reeves words are not overly sentimental but an accurate assessment of the life and times of this legendary family.

Overall, The John F. Kennedys: A Family Album, is a pleasant, yet sometimes sad journey looking back at what was considered the perfect family of two successful, stunning parents and their adorable children. Behind the photos, all was not perfect but Mark Shaw's camera didn't lie -- in the end, they were like any other family with problems but in-between they knew how to have fun and simply enjoy each others company, as is evident in many of Shaw's photos, especially those showing them at play at their home on Cape Cod.

Followers of the Kennedy's will no doubt enjoy this book, as will those who are interested in what life was like for a very public family who shared their private times with a talented photographer and with the world. If you like taking a look back in time, you will no doubt enjoy the journey Mark Shaw and Richard Reeves takes you on.

TOUCHING PHOTOGRAPHS
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-08
This book has beautiful photographs of the former first family. Congradulations to Mark Shaw for a wonderful job!!!!!! FOR QUESTIONS OR DISCUSSIONS ON JACKIE ONASSIS, PLEASE E-MAIL ME AT MellissaLD@aol.com. HOPE TO HEAR FROM YOU!!!!!!!!!!!

FAMILY FRIENDLY
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-30
Mark Shaw's book is a real treat. His loving, poignant photographs show the real love, the real bonds, the real ties within the most famous family. The pictures of little Caroline and John are among my favorites. Caroline and John from all accounts have remained so natural, so wonderfully, refreshingly normal. I loved seeing these two children at play. Pennsylvania Avenue could have been Main Street. To their parents' credit, they grew up unaffected. This book shows it.

Presidents
Killing the President
Published in Paperback by Baby Lovecat Designs (2007-08-08)
Author: Teresa Bergen
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Great read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-07
Wow. I loved this book! It was funny, touching, in-touch, and edgy. I couldn't put it down, and hope there will be more to read from Teresa soon.

Epiphanies for Nobodies
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
If you are a human rights advocate who proclaims the dignity of all people, a Buddhist who believes all sentient beings have Buddha nature, or a Christian who seeks God in everyone, read Killing the President and apply yourself to those at the lower end of the bell curve. The novel's young protagonists, Justin and Zoe, are untalented, unattractive, uninteresting, unmotivated nobodies, surrounded by lacklustre acquaintances in sleazy Portland settings. Someone who, amazingly, does care about these people is author, artist, and oral historian Teresa Bergen, writing from firsthand observation in Portland.

Bergen tracks her protagonists in the humble settings through which their lives flow. They take paths of least resistance under benevolent guidance or exploitation by acquaintances, never rising to the status of sympathetic victims. Justin's course is skewed by an undercover FBI agent who overhears his inane speculation about a golfing companion killing the president with a well-aimed golf ball. Among the stations of his flight, always directed by others, is a group home for the mentally retarded. Zoe's course is skewed by an unnamed, debilitating illness, which delivers her to a good-and-evil home for dying girls supported by an internet porn site. The brief crossings of their lives teach the unromantic lesson that love, like work, depends on initiative and competence.

The storyteller has quite an ear for language, trained by years of transcribing oral history interviews. Readers who can read through the foul language of many careless speakers will transcend with Zoe and Justin to small epiphanies of human agency and care for others. Small but instructive for we readers who believe ourselves more masters of our fates than they.

just because you're paranoid (don't mean they're not after you)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Teresa Bergen's novel Killing the President is a swiftly-moving tale that is both hilarious and deeply disturbing. It easily one of the best novels I have ever read, and is one of those works that captures, as in a photograph, a specific moment in history (when the Bush Administration seemed all-powerful), and uses it as a springboard to develop universal themes, which in this case include paranoia, romantic love, oppression, and fetish capitalism. Bergen's prose is as excellent as any other modern writer I have encountered and has the added virtue of being delightfully enjoyable and accessible; her writing is clear and concise, almost journalistic, and Bergen is never seduced by the beauty of her prose at the expense of the plot. Her characters somehow seem more real than real than real people! Although politics play an important part in the narative, there is no didactic propaganda here - Bergen is no polemicist. Without revealing too much of the plot, let me merely note that the twin stories concern a young Portlander who goes underground after becoming convinced the government is after him, and his ill girlfriend who finds a very unusual refuge for herself after his disappearance. The way these two plots are resolved is highly unusual and is another quality of the book that makes it remarkable. Bergen is a major talent and it is my hope more of her work becomes available soon to the public - it is my suspicion we will all be hearing her name more and more in the years to come. Lovers of fiction, rejoice: put away your dry tomes with their lugubrious yarns of lawyers and divorcees, and get your hands on a copy of this book immediately - if you don't like it I'll kill the... oh, never mind.

A realistic surreal romp in unhip hipster land
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-28
I've been looking for a novel of this caliber for awhile from a new writer and finally I found it! Not only is Killing the President hard to put down, but the novel makes us question what we think is real and what is really going on. Bergen's novel will make you ask: what exactly is going on with Homeland Security, behind the walls of residential homes, or among the hipsters at local coffee shops? Hmmm...read Bergen's book, and then you'll know you know nothing. This book is relevant to the times, and a must read for every politically aware but semi-apathetic love struck average Joe/Josephine.

I lol'd.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-31
This book made me laugh out loud. In a coffeeshop. Actually, I didn't just laugh- I snorted and then kept snickering, oblivious to the disbelieving stares of the hipsters surrounding me.

The author just nails the internal experiences of her characters- they're so real, so human and flawed and pathetic and beautiful. So, in addition to being funny, the book has heart. It also contains concise political and social commentary, without descending into jingoism or preachiness.

I loved it. Best contemporary book I've read in a long time.

Presidents
Lincoln's Other White House: The Untold Story of the Man and His Presidency
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (2005-09-06)
Author: Elizabeth Brownstein
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Good read.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-25
Interesting angle on Lincoln presidency. Many of the momentous occasions of this era took place at a location most Americans are totally unfamiliar with. This book goes a long way in revealing another White House which played a very big role in the life of our greatest president.

A Splendid Contribution
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-15
I have read a number of books on the Civil War in Washington...Fine as those books are, they do not accomplish two things that are splendid contributions of your book on the weekend home that the Lincolns made of their cottage at the Soldiers' Home.

First, we often forget the huge personal burden that the war place on Lincoln and his belief, strong in the summer of 1864, that he would be defeated in the next election and that the gains in the war would slip back into Southern control. We can see in your book how his days and nights in the cottage helped Lincoln to hold on to and expand what he had until victory in the 1864 election was assured.

The other is the loving relationship of the President with his wife, Mary Lincoln. We often hear of her oddities and running up of debts. What we do not hear of, and what admirably is stressed in your book, is what you describe as "the mutual affection and mutual dependence" that always linked them despite their great differences in character. Respect for Mary Lincoln, and her contributions to the greatness of Abraham Lincoln, is something we could use more of in writing American history.

I will not go on expect to say that I think I have already indicated the greatness of your book, and my hope that librarians and readers everywhere will have an opportunity to benefit from its revelations and the new light it brings on the life of one of our very greatest Presidents.

Lincoln's Other White House
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-05
The author has done a wonderful job showing what a real human being that Lincoln was. A friend of mine borrowed my book and liked it so well that
she went out and immediately bought 5 more to give as Christmas presents. It is just the right size for a gift book and so well written anyone will be proud to own it. I have also bought 6 more copies to give all my family for Christmas. Everyone should read it, everyone will enjoy it. written by Malcolm Kelly, a Kentuckian proud or both Mr and Mrs Lincoln who were born in this state.

fresh look at the Lincolns
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-17
I especially enjoyed the fresh approach to Lincoln and to his wife Mary Todd, who comes across in this new book as an elegant, urbane, and gracious `Republican Queen.' The account of the Lincolns' marriage and their home life at the White House and the Soldiers' Home, from observers such as the Union Army soldiers who guarded him for three years, is fascinating. The book is based on extensive research and is enriched by fresh anecdotes about Lincoln, by Whitman's and abolitionist Longfellow's poetry, and letters and memoirs of the diverse personalities with whom Lincoln interacted, particularly his generals and cabinet members.

New Light on an Old Subject
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-14
It must be difficult-given the plethora of books on Lincoln-to shed new light on an old subject. However, Elizabeth Brownstein does. Through careful and thorough research, Ms. Brownstein addresses issues hitherto unexplored. Lincoln's summer home...provides a suitable setting to describe Lincoln's activities outside the White House. One learns, for instance, that the first draft of the Emancipation Proclamation was completed here. One also learns that, far from being a retreat from the hustle and bustle of Pennsylvania Avenue, the home facilitated Lincoln's open-mindedness about receiving virtual strangers at virtually any hour of the day or night and resulted in serious sleep deprivation.

However, it was in the other topics addressed in the book that Lincoln's character is at its most illuminating. His fascination with weaponry, his patience in his dealings with his wife, and his ability to establish collegial relationship with people of vastly differing temperaments are all thoughtfully explored...The characters highlighted are dispassionately analyzed in such a way as to enable the reader to be part of the scene at all times. For instance, Lincoln's wife, so often pilloried...is given a fair hearing and is properly depicted as a courageous soul confronted by agonizing choices and exaggerated expectations of the First Lady's performance as a suitable consort of the most admired President in American History...Mrs. Brownstein provides a valuable service for readers interested in the less dramatic, but no less insightful, clues about Lincoln the President, confronted, as he was, by the unprecedented challenges associated with his era.

Presidents
Lincoln's Unknown Private Life: An Oral History by His Housekeeper Mariah Vance 1850-1860
Published in Hardcover by Hastings House (1995-09-01)
Author: Lloyd Ostendorf
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The Downstairs Talks About the Upstairs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-18
Terrific book. Even though these are the recorded remembrances of a servant which are being recalled from many years in the past, this is the best book I have found to get an all-around look inside the Lincoln family. OK, so maybe all of the particulars are slightly colored by time passing, the impressions which they left still count. While everyone knows that Mary Lincoln had emotional problems, it says something that most biographies leave out--that is, emotional and medical problems which, since medicine is not very advanced, caused Mary to self-medicate.

While I knew women took laudenum, I forgot about paregoric which was only removed from pharmacies about 20 years ago. Both are derived from opiates and she may well have taken them together. Add to these two drugs the wine from the wine cabinet (the Lincolns liked to entertain and Mary knew all about sherry and good wines) and you have a recipe for disaster. Certainly something people in the 20th and 21st centuries know all about. The book states that the servant once told Mrs. Lincoln that she had collected all the empty wine bottles and that Mary drank her paregoric straight from a rather large bottle. In an attempt to gain self-control, Mary falls apart and so does the household. Also, a good picture of Robert who has fallen into disgrace in history but who is seen as a victim of the situation. His brother dies, his father is gone a good deal and his mother has panic attacks, over medicates and collapses.

The servant portrays Mary in an honest manner--as a lady who has little self-confidence, falls back on her aristocratic upbringing when she is in trouble, self-medicates and then cries afterward because she knows she has caused everyone pain. She is also portrayed as generous, kind and pretty when she is feeling well.

Overall, a good portrait of the three Lincolns. For what it is worth, another book helps this book along when it states that the autopsy on Mrs. Lincoln showed a large brain tumor. What this family needed was modern medicine and a good doctor.

A rare glimpse of Lincoln's life before he became President.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-24
I found this a very colorful and informative work and I agree that this is probably the most improtant work published on Lincoln in the last twenty years. You can see what Lincoln delt with in his relationship with his wife; her habits and emotional problems and what working for the Lincoln's was really like. You also get a rare picture of young Robert Lincoln who has been very misunderstood and maligned by history. I've read this book twice so far and picked up something new each time. It's well worth the price and is a valuable addition to any Lincoln collection.

An Irreplaceable Inside Look at the Lincoln Family
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-31
I could hardly credit that there existed a detailed portrait of the Lincoln family by an African-American domestic during the family's Springfield years. Yet here it is and, as Lloyd Ostendorf's prefatory material demonstrates, it is undeniably authentic, though unendorsed by much of the academic community.
This is a fascinating book.Its vivid portrayal of the daily life of the Lincoln household is by turns perplexing, funny, moving, and sad. Mariah Vance was first employed by the Lincolns as a laundress in 1850 after Mary Todd had run off every other working woman in Springfield. Henry Vance actually extracted extra wages--the equivalent of combat pay--from Abraham Lincoln for his wifeýs work. Over the next decade, Mrs. Vance became increasingly involved in the household and enjoyed a substantial measure of intimacy with the Lincolns.
The Lincoln who emerges from these pages is startlingly vivid. He is by turns deep, playful, philosophical, earthy, boyish, magisterial, romantic, distant, intimate--and always present. He partakes in absolutely no measure of the modern trait of numbness or non-feeling. His sadness, laughter, thoughtfulness are all immediate and resilient.
He is different in important ways from the man portrayed by much academic scholarship. He is not only more religious, he is much more Biblically grounded than has been supposed. In fact, Mrs. Vance insists that Lincoln was baptised by full immersion into the Church of the Brethren in 1860, just after his election to the Presidency. Conventional academics are skeptical of the story, but it makes sense, when juxtaposed against the language of the Second Inaugural.
Lincoln was also clearly not a racist. The book describes incidents in his early life when he came into close contact with African Americans, worked with them, socialized with them and in one case vigorously defended them to his own detriment.
He is punctilious about calling Mariah "Mrs. Vance" and her husband, Henry, "Mr. Vance," until he knows them well enough to call them by their first names without compromising respect. He has no compunction about socializing with them visibly and unselfconsciously. And he is vocal and definitive about providing cash remuneration for labor at a time when the bestowing of hand-me-downs on domestics was considered an act generosity. He is, in short, entirely unpatronizing. On the other hand, as a husband, Abraham Lincoln had what we now call "problems with intimacy." Whether justifiably or not, he was constantly away from home, riding the circuit or politicking. Thus, he laid the burden of coping with his wifeýs problems on the shoulders of his young son Robert. That the latter grew up to become a distinguished citizen in his own right is a tribute to his character.
For Mary Todd Lincoln was much more than any husband and child could handle. Some have called Mariah's portrait of her sympathetic. Good God! What would be unsympathetic? In these pages, Mrs. Lincoln is portrayed as a grandiose, manic-depressive, narcissistic, drug-addict. It's true that Mariah Vance felt tremendous compassion for Mary Todd Lincoln--in fact for all the Lincolns--but it's hard for the reader to sympathize with Mrs. Lincoln, particularly when it's revealed that she administered paregoric, the mixture of alcohol and opium to which she was addicted, to her babies.
The spirit of Ann Rutledge hovers over the domestic life of the Lincolns like a cloud. A quarter century after the young woman's death, Lincoln was still preoccupied with her. At one point, he finds in a shop and purchases a tintype portrait of a girl who he says is Ann's twin. In a colossal error in judgment, he shows this portrait to his wife and begins talking about his feelings for Ann, eliciting from his wife an entirely predictable, and not unjustified, eruption of violence, invective, and self-pity.
And yet the book is often very funny. Mariah Vance was an acute observer, who loved the Lincoln family deeply but without illusions. Her quick wit and refusal to be intimidated by her "betters" clearly delighted Lincoln himself, who described himself with neither self-pity nor resentment as "white trash." Her love and support for Robert Lincoln were clearly essential to the boy's psychological survival.
This is in every sense a domestic drama. The imminent earthquake of civil war is evident just offstage, but never dominates the action. The story also has something of the arc of a novel, as Abraham and Mary Lincoln learn to resolve the wounds of the past and reforge their marriage.
My only objection has to do with the Lincolns' language. This book was transcribed in short hand by a young woman named Ada Sutton in the first decade of the twentieth century. Decades later, the mature Ms. Sutton wrote out the memoirs, retaining Mariah Vance's Black English, which she had taken down phonetically.
The conversation of the Lincolns, however, she translated into a formal English of her own devising that completely lacks the vigor and suppleness of colloquial speech. This rings false because the Lincolns did not speak in such a stilted manner. At one point, Mrs. Vance notes that the Harvard-educated Robert Lincoln spoke correct English and tried to get his parents to emulate him, but to no avail. "They talked like old Kaintuck folks, what they was," Mariah observes.
This is an absolutely irreplaceable book, so full of pleasures and riches that when I finished it I turned around and started reading it all over again.

A hero to his valet(ess)?
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-06
When I came across this book I thought: surely its a hoax! But no, the recollections of Mariah Vance are well attested. I suppose one should have to urge caution because: (1)The memories are filtered through the person to whom Mariah gave her recollections. (2) They are reminiscences from many years after Lincoln had been well and truly canonised not only as the saviour of the Union, but among blacks he was doubly revered as the Liberator of the slaves. Hence most of the marriage troubles are blamed on Mrs Lincoln who comes across as somewhat of a termagant, saved only by occasional tendernesses to husband and to Mariah herself. To me the reproduction of Mariah's speech as 1900-style black idiom grated a little - when will authors realise that this type of writing can pall quickly, when grammatical english almost always sounds fresh and immediate? Despite all those slight negatives, this book was immensely refreshing - it clears up a lot of mysteries about the Lincoln's relationship, about Lincoln's love for Ann Ruttledge who died tragically, and about Lincoln's life-long search for religious truth. It re-habilitates Robert Lincoln as a worthy son of a great father, and answers some of the criticism he took from historians about the later treatment of his mother. Lincoln has often been accused of 'racism', and was once forced into an election statement against racial equality, which may have been sincere, but he had no qualms about his eldest son being best friend of the son of his black housekeeper, and having regular visits between the two households. Even with the warnings given at the start of this review, its a 'must read' for Lincoln scholars and collectors, and an interesting further study for those who have read the Sandburg and David H. Donald biographies.

A hero to his valet(ess)?
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-06
When I came across this book I thought: surely its a hoax! But no, the recollections of Mariah Vance are well attested. I suppose one should have to urge caution because: (1)The memories are filtered through the person to whom Mariah gave her recollections. (2) They are reminiscences from many years after Lincoln had been well and truly canonised not only as the saviour of the Union, but among blacks he was doubly revered as the Liberator of the slaves. Hence most of the marriage troubles are blamed on Mrs Lincoln who comes across as somewhat of a termagant, saved only by occasional tendernesses to husband and to Mariah herself. To me the reproduction of Mariah's speech as 1900-style black idiom grated a little - when will authors realise that this type of writing can pall quickly, when grammatical english almost always sounds fresh and immediate? Despite all those slight negatives, this book was immensely refreshing - it clears up a lot of mysteries about the Lincoln's relationship, about Lincoln's love for Ann Ruttledge who died tragically, and about Lincoln's life-long search for religious truth. It re-habilitates Robert Lincoln as a worthy son of a great father, and answers some of the criticism he took from historians about the later treatment of his mother. Lincoln has often been accused of 'racism', and was once forced into an election statement against racial equality, which may have been sincere, but he had no qualms about his eldest son being best friend of the son of his black housekeeper, and having regular visits between the two households. Even with the warnings given at the start of this review, its a 'must read' for Lincoln scholars and collectors, and an interesting further study for those who have read the Sandburg and David H. Donald biographies.


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->School Time-->Social Studies-->History-->By Region-->North America-->United States-->Presidents-->18
Related Subjects: Washington, George Adams, John Jefferson, Thomas Lincoln, Abraham Madison, James Monroe, James Adams, John Quincy Jackson, Andrew Van Buren, Martin Harrison, William Henry Tyler, John Polk, James Knox Taylor, Zachary Fillmore, Millard Pierce, Franklin Buchanan, James Johnson, Andrew Grant, Ulysses Simpson Hayes, Rutherford Birchard Garfield, James Abram Arthur, Chester Alan Harrison, Benjamin Truman, Harry S McKinley, William Taft, William Howard Roosevelt, Theodore Wilson, Thomas Woodrow Bush, George Walker Harding, Warren Gamaliel Coolidge, John Calvin Hoover, Herbert Clark Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Eisenhower, Dwight David Nixon, Richard Milhous Ford, Gerald Rudolph Carter, James Earl Reagan, Ronald Wilson Bush, George Herbert Walker Clinton, William Jefferson Johnson, Lyndon Baines Kennedy, John Fitzgerald
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