Roosevelt the Lion and the Fox
Published in Paperback by Harcourt (1963)
Author: James M. Burns
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A Great Political Biography of a Great President
Title Says It All
Decidedly Insightful
Fox, Fin, and Feather: Tales from the Field
Published in Hardcover by The Derrydale Press (2001)
Authors: Henry W. Hooker, James L. Young, and Norman M. Fine
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Everyone will love this book
Save Your Knees
Published in Paperback by DTP (1988)
Authors: James, M.D. Fox and Rick McGuire
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Ok, but not as informative as I would have liked.
Modern Automotive Technology
Published in Hardcover by Gordon & Breach Science Pub (15 February, 2001)
Authors: James E. Duffy, Fuki, Tonkov, Peter A. Fox, and Robert M. Kerr
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Informitive and detailed
a look into the automotive world
Incredible... A real page turner
Choices in Reconstruction of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL)
Published in Audio Cassette by Contemporary Medical Education (1997)
Author: James M. Fox
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Crunch (Bogie Mystery)
Published in Paperback by Paperjacks (1988)
Author: James M. Fox
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Early History of Charles James Fox
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (1979)
Author: George M. Trevelyan
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The harlot and the statesman : the story of Elizabeth Armistead & Charles James Fox
Published in Unknown Binding by Kensal Press ()
Author: I. M. Davis
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Laboratory Animal Medicine
Published in Hardcover by Academic Press (1997)
Authors: James G. Fox, Bennett J. Cohen, and Franklin M. Loew
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Letters: Raymond Chandler and James M. Fox
Published in Hardcover by Neville Pub (1978)
Authors: James Pepper and James M. Fox
Amazon base price: $50.00
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Burns's treatment of Roosevelt is comprehensive, "[treating] much of [Roosevelt's] personal as well as his public life, because a great politician's career remorselessly sucks everything into its vortex." Roosevelt was the only child of a member of the upstate New York landed gentry, and he could have led a life of leisure. Instead, he was sent to Groton School in Massachusetts, where the headmaster, according to Burns, "made much of his eagerness to educate his boys for political leadership." Roosevelt completed his formal education at Harvard College and Columbia University Law School. Burns writes that Roosevelt's first elective office, as a New York State Senator was a "political education," and he became a "Young Lion" in Albany. Roosevelt served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy in Washington, D.C., during World War I and was the candidate for Vice President on the Democrat Party's unsuccessful ticket in 1920. In 1921, Roosevelt was stricken with polio, and the crippling disease would have ended the public career of a less ambitious and determined man. Instead, he continued to work hard at politics, was elected Governor of New York in 1928 and then President in 1932. This was just the beginning of a remarkable career in high office.
Burns makes clear that Roosevelt was a progressive in the tradition of Woodrow Wilson but was without strong ideas or a specific agenda. According to Burns: "The presidency, Roosevelt said shortly after his election, 'is preeminently a place of moral leadership.'" Retired Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes offered this cutting assessment: "A second -class intellect, but a first-class temperament." Action to combat the depression was necessary to restore public confidence in government, and the first Hundred Days of Roosevelt's first term was one of the great periods of legislative achievement in American history. Burns writes: "Roosevelt was following no master program." However, in Burns's view: "The classic test of greatness in the White House has been the chief executive's capacity to lead Congress." According to that test, Roosevelt was a great president. Burns writes that, "[i]n his first two years in office Roosevelt achieved to a remarkable degree the exalted position of being President of all the people." Burns explains: "A remarkable aspect of the New Deal was the sweep and variety of the groups it helped."
As early as 1934, however, organized conservative opposition to the New Deal was forming. (A newspaper cartoon reprinted here shows a figure identified as the Republican Party holding a sign stating: "Roosevelt is a Red!") Roosevelt was increasingly attacked as a traitor to his class, but a large measure of his genius was his ability to hold the more extreme elements of the New Deal in check. Roosevelt's political skills were tested in every way. For instance, Burns writes that Senator Robert Wagner's National Labor Relations Act, which proposed to"[vest] massive economic and political power in organized labor" "was the most radical legislation passed during the New Deal." According to Burns, Roosevelt's initial reaction to the bill was "invariably cool or evasive," and the president, with what Burns describes as "typical Rooseveltian agility," announced his support for the bill only after its passage was certain. Burns demonstrates that Roosevelt's support, both in Congress and among the public, gradually eroded in the late 1930s, but he was, of course, elected again in 1940 and 1944. Roosevelt's nomination in 1940 was especially skillful. Many in his own party favored maintaining the tradition of limiting presidents to two terms, and Democratic Party leaders lined up in the hope of succeeding Roosevelt. Roosevelt outfoxed all of them and was elected to his historic third term.
I believe it is fair to say that Burns admires Roosevelt, but this book is not a whitewash. Burns candidly writes about Roosevelt's "deviousness." And the author is appropriately critical of Roosevelt's attempt to "pack" the Supreme Court following his overwhelming re-election in 1936. However, in my opinion, these instances simply are proof of the truism that great men are not always good men. Burns took the subtitle of this book from the Italian Renaissance political philosopher Machiavelli's dictum that a political leader must be strong like a lion and shrewd like a fox. Franklin D. Roosevelt was both, and that made him a great president. This is a great political biography of that great president