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Cordery, Stacy A. Alice: Alice Roosevelt Longworth, from White House Princess to Washington Power Broker New York, New York, U.S.A. Viking Press 2007 0670018333 / 9780670018338 Hard Cover Fine Fine A photo of this book is available. Like-new condition. Appears unread. NO remainder marks or price clippings. Price inside dustcover: $32.95. Illustrated with photos. NO writing, marks or tears. Tight spine, bright pages. 590 pages. The Barnes & Noble Review How many Americans wish they had a royal family to dote on? Probably a great many: witness the outpouring of adulation (and then grief) over Britain's Princess Diana. A hundred years ago, we had one of our own. Her name was Alice, and she was the firstborn daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt (TR). Beautiful and stylish, she could draw admiring crowds merely by showing up. She knew how to have fun and could be fun to be around. At the same time, she was always a "problem," mostly for her father and stepmother, but also for some of her relatives and friends. When she was young, TR used to quip that he could be president of the United States or attend to Alice, but he could not do both. Synopsis An entertaining and eye-opening biography of America's most memorable first daughter From the moment Teddy Roosevelt's outrageous and charming teenage daughter strode into the White House-carrying a snake and dangling a cigarette-the outspoken Alice began to put her imprint on the whole of the twentieth-century political scene. Her barbed tongue was as infamous as her scandalous personal life, but whenever she talked, powerful people listened, and she reigned for eight decades as the social doyenne in a town where socializing was state business. Historian Stacy Cordery's unprecedented access to personal papers and family archives enlivens and informs this richly entertaining portrait of America's most memorable first daughter and one of the most influential women in twentieth-century American society and politics. Publishers Weekly The fiercely intelligent eldest daughter of President Teddy Roosevelt (1884-1981) was rebellious and outspoken partly as the result of her desperation to gain the attention of an emotionally distant father, according to historian Cordery. Utilizing Alice's personal papers, Cordery describes how she was more devastated by the political infidelity of her husband, House speaker Nicholas Longworth, during the 1912 presidential election (he sided with Taft over TR) than by his sexual dalliances. Her own affair with powerful Idaho Sen. William Borah resulted in the birth of her only child, Paulina. When her beloved father died in 1919, the stoic Alice simply omitted it completely from her autobiography, and she was a poor mother to Paulina, who died in 1957, at 32, from an overdose of prescription medicines mixed with alcohol. Alice's independence of mind often led her against the grain: she worked to defeat Wilson's League of Nations and was a WWII isolationist and America First activist. Her witty syndicated newspaper columns criticized FDR and the New Deal, and she betrayed her cousin Eleanor by encouraging FDR's liaison with Lucy Mercer Rutherford. Cordery (Theodore Roosevelt: In the Vanguard of the Modern) pens an authoritative, intriguing portrait of a first daughter who broke the mold. Photos. (Oct. 22) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information Biography Stacy A. Cordery is chair of the history department at Monmouth College and bibliographer for the National First Ladies' Library. Price:
9.78 USD
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