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Hardcover The Mortal Presidency: Illness And Anguish In The White House Book

ISBN: 0465032087

ISBN13: 9780465032082

The Mortal Presidency: Illness And Anguish In The White House

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

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Book Overview

The presidency of the USA harms your health. This book documents and analyzes the full extent of presidential death and sickness, looking at five modern presidents - Coolidge, FDR, Eisenhower, Kennedy and Reagan - showing that all suffered from medical problems that affected their administrations.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Great Book

I am a grad student at Northeastern University, taking a class on The Presidency with the author of this book, Robert Gilbert. He is amazing and extremly knowledgeable on every aspect of the presidency. My classmates and I alllllll love him and agree that he is one of the best professors we have ever had. Buy his book, and if you have the chance TAKE HIS CLASS!

Intresting for biographies of studied presidents

This book argues that the modern presidency is so stressful that it is a threat to the health of its occupants. After a short chapter on the general mortality rates of presidents, the author gives five fascinating case studies (of Presidents Coolidge, Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Reagan). I don't think the author really proves his main premise: in recent times Presidents Nixon, Ford and Reagan have comfortably exceeded their normal life expectancies, and, for that matter, it looks like Lyndon Johnson was actually kept alive by his presidency. (He looked after himself prudently while in office, but started chain-smoking again and gorged on fried foods after he left. He died four years later.) For all that, however, the case studies are quite fascinating and should be studied by anyone who wishes to know more about any of the men in the case studies. For example, Gilbert shows that, contrary to legend, neither Roosevelt nor Kennedy performed his duties less than well, however poor his health. In short, the book is well worth reading for its biographical detail, but it doesn't really add anything to the debate about reforming the American presidency
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