Hoover: An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times
Hoover: An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times book cover

Hoover: An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times

Paperback – November 6, 2018

Price
$15.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
768
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307743879
Dimensions
6.1 x 1.5 x 9.2 inches
Weight
2 pounds

Description

“An exemplary biography—exhaustively researched, fair-minded and easy to read. It can nestle on the same shelf as David McCullough’s Truman , a high compliment indeed.” —Edward Kosner, The Wall Street Journal “Outstanding…. Whyte makes a convincing case for the reassessment of our 31st president…. This well organized, thoroughly researched, and smoothly written biography persuasively demonstrates that its subject’s place in history should be elevated far beyond its current status.” —Talmage Boston, Washington Independent Review of Books “Whyte’s account is the most full-fleshed and three-dimensional Hoover readers have yet encountered” —Steve Donoghue, The Christian Science Monitor “Whyte details how Hoover was up against worldwide economic forces that he had no way of controlling and points out that the hard times continued long into Roosevelt’s presidency. Just as interesting, however, are Whyte’s accounts of Hoover’s early life, from his rise from orphanhood to world-traveling problem solver, and his post-presidency attempt to restore his image and regain his place among the 20th century’s most admired people.” —Keith Herrell, BookPage "Summons us to see Hoover as a human personality, more than just a walking embodiment of Great Depression studies.... In the unceasing ideological quarrying of the American past, this great man and execrated president has proven himself useful again. To understand Hoover’s life, career, and his legacy in full, this rich new biography will certainly prove indispensable.” —David Frum, The Atlantic "Monumental.... Important, and irresistibly interesting.... Whyte serves as a learned but inviting tour guide to this extraordinary life, bringing a fresh eye and fresh perspective.... [He] shows us a man of impatience, insensitivity and impolitic behaviour, though balanced with great confidence and competence.... Over all, the Hoover story—and the Whyte book—is a distinctly American tale: persistence, ambition, grand plans (all covered with a shellac wash of overweening pride and overwhelming arrogance), played out over five continents and marked by three economic crises. The result is an astonishing alchemy of soaring achievement and deep disappointment." —David Shribman, Toronto Globe and Mail "Hoover was doomed to be remembered as the man who was too rigidly conservative to react adeptly to the Depression, as the hapless foil to the great Franklin Roosevelt, and as the politician who managed to turn a Republican country into a Democratic one…. Hoover ...helpfully lays out a long and copious résumé that doesn’t fit on this stamp of dismissal." —Nicholas Lemann, The New Yorker “[A] comprehensive and accessible study…. Whyte’s work contextualizes Hoover as a man of his times…. In seeking to understand rather than judge Hoover throughout the entire trajectory of his life, Whyte succeeds in creating a positive overview of the leader’s long prepresidential service.” —Frederick J. Augustyn Jr., Library Journal “A well-executed reexamination of the character and career of a gifted, unjustly maligned leader.… In this comprehensive and generally sympathetic biography, Whyte reminds us that both before and after his single term as president, Hoover compiled a record of extraordinary achievement…. Whyte stresses Hoover’s remarkable drive and even ruthlessness, qualities he brought to public service during WWI when he organized crucial food-relief efforts throughout Europe.” —Jay Freeman, Booklist “A great biography…. Hoover lived a life of adventure and accomplishment, and Whyte captures that spirit in engaging, readable prose…. Whyte doesn’t gloss over Hoover’s flaws, nor his failed efforts to right the economy during the Depression. But he makes it clear that Hoover’s presidency is not the only—or best—measure of his service to his country and world.” —Rob Cline, The Gazette (IA) "A thoughtful resurrection of a brilliant man who, aside from the Founding Fathers, did more good before taking office than any other president in American history." — Kirkus (starred review) "A clear-eyed, sympathetic portrayal of the American president best remembered for his inability to pull the U.S. out of the Great Depression.... [He] doesn’t shy away from [the] seedier aspects of Hoover’s life, but nor is he judgmental.... With adept explanations of the Depression's complexities and a refreshing sense of objectivity regarding Hoover's approach to combatting it, Whyte portrays a figure to be neither pitied nor reviled, but better understood." — Publishers Weekly "Often ranked as one of our worst presidents—his very name evokes Depression-era shantytowns—Hoover gets a reconsideration here that sweeps over his entire career… [Whyte] charts Hoover's rise from childhood poverty to business mega-success, then reminds us of Hoover’s large-scale humanitarian works during World War I and after the 1927 Mississippi floods and his efforts (however thankless) to combat the Great Depression. And he was tasked by President Harry Truman himself with aiding European refugees after World War II, which not everyone knows. Get reading." —Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal, " Barbara’s Picks" KENNETH WHYTE is the author of The Uncrowned King: The Sensational Rise of William Randolph Hearst, a Washington Post and Toronto Globe and Mail Book of the Year, and a nominee for four major Canadian book awards. He is a publishing and telecommunications executive and chairman of the Donner Canada Foundation. He was formerly editor in chief of Maclean's magazine, editor of the monthly Saturday Night magazine, and founding editor of the National Post . He lives in Toronto. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PREFACE xa0 A contemporary once described Herbert Hoover as the sort of man “to whom the incredible was forever happening.” Following a tragic childhood in which he was orphaned at the age of nine, he graduated (barely) with the inaugural class at Stanford University, made a name for himself in the rich goldfields of the Australian outback, and, still in his twenties, pulled off the biggest mining transaction in the hisxadtory of China. The deal closed months after he had been given up for dead in the Boxer Rebellion. Settling later in London at the height of the Edwardian era, he raised a family, established himself as a global mining tycoon, and gained international acclaim as a humanitarian in the early years of the Great War. After almost single-handedly resxadurrecting the European economy during the Versailles peace talks, he returned to America, where he knew every president from Theoxaddore Roosevelt to Richard Nixon, serving five of them in important roles in addition to fulfilling his own term in the White House. He remained a momentous and controversial figure through the New Deal, the Second World War, and into the Cold War, ending his days chasing bonefish in the Florida Keys and writing books, several at a time, in a luxurious suite in the Waldorf Towers with Cole Porter and the Duke of Windsor for neighbors. The challenge for Hoover biographers has never been a lack of exploit. Rather, it has been to find a coherent personality amid the nonstop action. As historical figures go, Hoover is a blur. He shielded himself from the scrutiny of journalists, independent biographers, and other strangers. Allergic to introspection, he rarely registered his thoughts and feelings in private conversation, let alone in diaries or journals. Wanting only to be remembered for his achievements, he destroyed an unknown quantity of his family’s correspondence. His three volumes of autobiography reveal little of personal significance and what is divulged is often unreliable. Fortunately, much of Hoover’s life was lived in public, and he was often closely observed despite his reticence. Many of those working with him realized they were in the company of an extraordinary man and recorded honest and intimate impressions of him in their notes, letters, diaries, and memoirs. As well, important family corresponxaddence escaped Hoover’s purges. The portrait that emerges here is largely constructed from these sources, many of them not previously utilized. Helpful as the sources are in locating elements of Hoover’s perxadsonality, making sense of what is found is another matter. His capacixadties and achievements are obvious and awe-inspiring. Among the forty-four chief executives, he stands with the most intelligent and erudite, and none worked harder. He was the only president to have enjoyed two brilliant careers before the White House, and next to John Quincy Adams he was its most cosmopolitan inhabitant, having lived two decades abroad and circled the globe five times before the age of aviation. He was also a man of enormous goodwill, supportxading with countless acts of charity his needy friends and relatives, not to mention the family of a colleague who was jailed for swindling him out of a large sum of money. The number of lives Hoover saved through his various humanitarian campaigns might exceed 100 milxadlion, a record of benevolence unlike anything in human history. Yet at the same time he bristled with more than the usual array of eccentricxadities, tics, tempers, neuroses, failings, and contradictions. He carried through his days the scars of his miserable boyhood, and he seems to have been determined in certain phases of his existence to prove points and settle scores of interest only to his bruised psyche. A man of force, quick-minded and brusque, he could be dangerous in pursuit of his interests, and he would rightly be concerned during his political years to obscure certain records from his business career. Tormented by guilt and paranoia, he twice broke down when his least honorable deeds came under public scrutiny. The cracks and tensions in Hoover’s personality expressed themxadselves in curious ways. When frustrated in pursuit of a righteous cause, he could fight with the heart of a saint and the conscience of a robber baron. He had a habit of crushing individuals and organizations who shared his objectives. Disliked, as a rule, by other politicians, includxading many Republicans, he disapproved of them in turn yet sought to lead them as head of state. Somehow he inspired fierce loyalty in choxadsen colleagues and employees without going to the trouble of formxading normal human relationships with them. He knew thousands of eminent personages around the world yet related better to children. Genuinely modest, he had an almost biological compulsion to see his name in the papers. An introvert, he rarely ate a meal alone. A faithful family man, he was for decades almost a bystander in his family’s life. Hoover’s political nature is also difficult to pin down. He does not fall neatly into any of the familiar political categories—Democrat or Republican, progressive or reactionary, populist or establishment, nationalist or internationalist. Pragmatic by temperament, he seldom thought in terms of labels or ideologies. He preferred to be true to himself and his thoughtful, in many ways commendable conception of America. This outlook, together with his perseverance, his unflagxadging willingness to serve, and the tumultuous years in which he lived, led him all over the political map. By his retirement, and despite his essential pragmatism, he had reasonable claims to paternity of the two main ideological currents of the American century: New Deal liberalxadism and the modern conservative movement born in opposition to it. If his reserve and his complexity make Hoover hard to know, the Great Depression, which began months after he was sworn in as America’s thirty-first president (1929–33), and which stands as the worst domestic tragedy to befall the United States in the century and a half following the Civil War, adds enormously to the problem. Generations of historians and economists have been preoccupied with the questions of how the Depression started, how it ended, its consequences for domestic and international policy, and the relationxadship of Americans to their government, among much else. Naturally, they have studied Hoover for his contributions to the Depression, his efforts to fight it, and his failure to reverse it. His biographers have tended to adopt this same lens in treating him. One, for examxadple, has prosecuted him as a man whose deficiencies of character and leadership rendered him insensitive and inept in his nation’s hour of need, and another has defended him (the minority position) as a man of unexampled virtue whose life was an “almost unbroken record of success” and who did all that might reasonably have been done to combat the Depression.* Either way, the Depression, or more particxadularly, Hoover’s management of it, is the essence of the story, the trial toward which everything in his life proceeds, and by which everything is measured. Indictment and advocacy shape and often overwhelm the story of the man. I do not wish to diminish the contributions of any of these works to an important debate on Hoover’s role in a crucial historical event. I have learned from them, and I join their conversation in parts of this book. Hoover, as Anne O’Hare McCormick wrote, was “the pivot of the dizziest turn of the wheel in this permanent revolution called America,” and it would be odd to avoid discussion of it. I nevertheless find the Depression a problematic lens for the purposes of biography. For starters, it is only in the vast sweep of history that the Great Depression appears as a single reference point. As Hoover knew it, it was not a discrete event but a maddeningly unpredictable series of emergencies of varied origin and severity—what he called “a battle upon a thousand fronts.” What’s more, the Depression had political, economic, social, and international dimensions, many of which had histories of their own dating back decades, and many of which would continue to haunt the nation through future decades. Hoover is a part of the whole story, and, as we will see, his profile shifts markedly at different points in the narrative. Not only is the Great Depression large and complicated, but it is still in litigation. Its nature and its causes have been under disxadpute since its inception, not surprisingly given that it changed the course of American history and raised questions of policy that are still with us today. New facts and arguments are continually brought to bear in its discussion as others are reordered, reinterpreted, or shot to pieces. Our knowledge of the stock market crash and the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, of the roles of fiscal and monetary policy and the gold standard, have all been substantially revised over time. Great swaths of the Depression story are reconsidered in these pages, including the Bonus Army episode, the Republican collapse of 1932, and the Hoover-Roosevelt interregnum. All this pleading is fair game. It is how we learn. Let it continue, recognizing that courtrooms are useful for testing evidence, scoring points, and rendering verdicts, but they are no place to learn someone’s life story. Notwithstanding my own contributions to the Great Depression debates, I have made a deliberate effort to privilege understanding over judgment in this narrative. It is the right approach for biography, and it seems only reasonable when one acknowledges that none of the policy makers, regardless of partisanship, ideology, or nationality, had a tight grip on what needed to be done with the economy after it crashed in 1929. It seems more reasonable still when we admit that our own expertise in managing such crises remains imperfect after ninety years of intensive study and additional practice. My intention with this book is to spring Hoover from the Depresxadsion and present him in another context, that of his full life. This is not simply to say that he had a life beyond the Depression. It is to recognize that he was molded by a series of experiences stretching from the Gilded Age to the Cold War. His boyhood shaped his busixadness experience, which informed his humanitarianism, which fashxadioned his approach to public service and his philosophy of American life, which in turn dictated certain attitudes to the challenges of his presidency, to the New Deal, to the next war, and so on. One thing leads to another and helps to make sense of the other, and it is only by following Hoover through his days as he lived them, one adventure at a time, without foreknowledge of outcomes or benefit of hindsight, that we can arrive at a faithful portrait of the man in his times. His times are crucial because the United States was on a momenxadtous journey of its own throughout Hoover’s adulthood. The long road from Theodore Roosevelt to John F. Kennedy wound through booms, busts, cataclysmic wars, uneasy peace, and all manner of political and social upheaval. For the American people, as for Hoover, the Great Depression was not an island in time but one of a series of closely entwined events that combined to transform their nation in stunning and irreversible ways. These events are inexplicable without reference to one another: the Depression would not have happened as it happened, or at all, without the Great War, and the Second World War would not have happened as it happened, or at all, without the Depression. I do not pretend that this is a revelation. I mention it only because we can get locked into reading history one episode at a time when, in many instances, as with a biographical subject, a longer view helps us to see things afresh. Indeed, by following the journeys of Hoover and the nation together through these decades, we gain a deeper appreciation for how each evolved, and how they affected each other. We notice the many ways in which they are mutually illuminative. One of the wonders of Hoover is that he was incomparably a man of his times. He shows up not just at one dizzying turn of the wheel but at all of them in the most consequential half century in American hisxadtory. He participated in and often embodied crucial national conflicts between traditional and modern, rural and urban, east and west, indixadvidual and collective, local and national, rich and poor, wet and dry, isolationist and interventionist. His involvement was consistently at a high level, and he always represented a strong point of view shared by some considerable portion of the American public. His prominence and ubiquity make him an invaluable guide to the epoch. This applies at a high level: he sharpens our insight into how the bucolic, wood-smoked America of his youth became the centralized, citified global powerhouse of his maturity. It also applies to particulars, for instance, the development of the nation’s leadership. Through Hoover we see how a new class of professional managers emerged during and after the Great War, how the minds of these men (they were all men) were opened and haunted by that conflict, how they came to believe that they could manipulate the nation’s economy for the betterment of its people, how they tentatively assumed stewardship of a broken sysxadtem of international finance, how they laid years of groundwork for what in retrospect looks like a sudden leap from the austerities of the Coolidge era to the unbridled activism of the Roosevelt years. The historian Eric Hobsbawm called the twentieth century “the age of extremes,” and although he had world history in mind the phrase is appropriate to American experience. In Hoover’s time, bloody international wars, unparalleled privation, and intellectual provocation lived in close quarters with massive economic expansion and social progress. He shared the extremes in his public and prixadvate lives, notching a range of achievement and failure unmatched by any American of his era, and perhaps any era. His highs, of which there were many, were wondrously high, his lows, also numerous, were unbearably low, and there were few points in his life at which reversal, in one direction or the other, did not beckon, whether by his own actions or by circumstances beyond his control. Any complete portrait of Hoover needs to embrace these ups and downs, volatility being a constant of the age. Despite the extremes, the welfare of most Americans improved strikingly between Hoover’s youth and his old age. The same cannot be said for him. His presidency was more interesting and impresxadsive than is generally acknowledged, but there is no getting around the fact that he was bounced from office in 1933 with the economy in pieces at his feet and one in four Americans unemployed. This inglorious political defeat at the pinnacle of his career is a fact, one it took him many years to absorb, and one from which he never entirely recovered. He would campaign doggedly for his vindication and adopt a brooding, obsessive animosity toward the political virtuoso who trounced him, Franklin Roosevelt. Both pursuits yielded modest results. To his enormous credit, Hoover did not allow his defeat and his enmity to destroy him. Nor did he let his battered prestige discourage him from pursuit of his admirable vision of American life, or interfere with his dedication to the service of the American people. He continxadued to work, to strive, to squeeze all he could from his existence, disxadplaying toward his countrymen a magnanimity, seldom reciprocated, that deserves to be considered among his greatest achievements. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "
  • An exemplary biography—exhaustively researched, fair-minded and easy to read. It can nestle on the same shelf as David McCullough’s
  • Truman
  • , a high compliment indeed." —
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • The definitive biography of Herbert Hoover, one of the most remarkable Americans of the twentieth century—
  • a wholly original account that will forever change the way Americans understand the man, his presidency, his battle against the Great Depression, and their own history.
  • An impoverished orphan who built a fortune. A great humanitarian. A president elected in a landslide and then resoundingly defeated four years later. Arguably the father of both New Deal liberalism and modern conservatism, Herbert Hoover lived one of the most extraordinary American lives of the twentieth century. Yet however astonishing, his accomplishments are often eclipsed by the perception that Hoover was inept and heartless in the face of the Great Depression.Now, Kenneth Whyte vividly recreates Hoover’s rich and dramatic life in all its complex glory. He follows Hoover through his Iowa boyhood, his cutthroat business career, his brilliant rescue of millions of lives during World War I and the 1927 Mississippi floods, his misconstrued presidency, his defeat at the hands of a ruthless Franklin Roosevelt, his devastating years in the political wilderness, his return to grace as Truman's emissary to help European refugees after World War II, and his final vindication in the days of Kennedy's "New Frontier." Ultimately, Whyte brings to light Hoover’s complexities and contradictions—his modesty and ambition, his ruthlessness and extreme generosity—as well as his profound political legacy.
  • Hoover: An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times
  • is the epic, poignant story of the deprived boy who, through force of will, made himself the most accomplished figure in the land, and who experienced a range of achievements and failures unmatched by any American of his, or perhaps any, era. Here, for the first time, is the definitive biography that fully captures the colossal scale of Hoover’s momentous life and volatile times.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Makes You Appreciate a Very Dedicated Man Who Got a Bad Rap From Historians

Before reading this book, the only thing I knew about Herbert Hoover was that he was the Republican president (1929 – 33) during the Great Depression and that his policies did little to alleviate the human misery that proliferated during this period. Because he seemed so inept, I viewed him as not very bright and a rich man who bought his way into the presidency. This was certainly not the man that we see in this book. The author presents him as extremely intelligent, hard-working and ethical. The many accolades that Hoover received both before and after his presidency confirm the author’s evaluation.
Hoover had a degree in geology from Stanford. He led the way for the standardization of materials and devices. He accomplished so much in the fields of geology and engineering that in 1964, a poll of 7,000 Columbia University engineering graduates, listed him and Thomas Edison as the two greatest engineers that the United States produced. Additionally, he authored at least 25 books.

Was he a rich man who bought his way into the presidency? He certainly did not begin life as a scion of a wealthy family as did Roosevelt. His parents were hard-working, devout Quakers with little money , who died young, leaving Hoover and his siblings as orphans. They were sent to live with various relatives. His uncle did have connections and those connections lead to Hoover attending Stanford. Hoover because of his business acumen and relentless work ethic, was able to accumulate a significant amount of money, but he was far from being one of the wealthiest Americans, and it was not his money that led to his being elected President, it was his numerous humanitarian deeds during WWI.

The consensus of most historians is that Hoover’s belief in volunteerism and personal responsibility blinded him to the need for government intervention to deal with a society far more complex than the one that existed in previous generations. They also point to his personality or lack thereof that made him unable to inspire people in these most desperate of times. Despite his shortcomings in dealing with the Great Depression, his accomplishments far outweigh this period of his life.

This is a very well written book and a must read for anyone with the slightest interest in American history.
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An Extraordinary Man

Herbert Hoover is mainly remembered today for his disastrous single term as president at the start of the Great Depression. That is unfortunate, as he is undoubtedly one of the most talented men of his generation and led a life jam-packed with memorable feats and achievements. In “Hoover: An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times” Kenneth Whyte presents a full portrait of the thirty-first president.

Orphaned at the age of nine and shipped from Iowa to Oregon to live with his Quaker relatives, Hoover had a trying childhood, full of disappointment and sadness. Whyte suggests that Hoover silently carried the sorrow of his childhood throughout life. And what a life it was!

Graduating in the inaugural class at Stanford University where he demonstrated “an unbroken record of academic mediocrity,” he burst onto the scene as a young mining engineer, emerging as one of the most tenacious and talented managers in the industry while still in his mid-twenties. From Western Australia to the Boxer Rebellion in China, Hoover traveled the world over for his work with the mining firm Bewick, Moreing and Company. By his mid-thirties, he was a self-made millionaire. But he wanted to be more than “just another rich man.”

The First World War intervened just in time to give his life meaning and purpose. First, he worked to coordinate the evacuation of American tourists stranded in London at the outbreak of the war. Next, and more pivotally, he led the ambitious effort to feed the neutral, but occupied country of Belgium through his chairmanship of the Belgian Relief Commission. When the United States joined the war, he returned home to head up the US Food Administration, essentially serving as “food czar” regulating prices and production in a war economy. In the words of US ambassador to London, Walter Page: “It’s an awful job you have; but you are a man made for awful jobs.”

Hoover performed spectacularly in every endeavor, reaping wide publicity and adulation for his self-less services. According to his future secretary of state, Henry Stimson, Hoover had “the greatest capacity for assimilating and organizing material of any man I ever knew.” By the end of the war his name was already being whispered as a potential candidate for president. Herbert Hoover very much liked how that sounded. “He had always considered himself the most capable man in any room,” Whyte writes, “and with rare exception he was right.”

One of Hoover’s greatest political assets was also one of his greatest liabilities. He was an outsider. He had no deep base of support in either party. He had spent the better part of twenty years working from London. Regulars in both parties viewed the wonder boy with a mix of awe and suspicion. Hoover decided to earn his way into the political establishment, accepting the lowly post of commerce secretary in the Harding administration. He was now part of the “official family,” as he liked to call it. He brought the same volcanic energy and desire for direct control to Commerce that he had exhibited during the war. Whyte argues that Hoover single-handedly transformed Commerce from a sleepy agency without much clout to the central organizing body of the American economy.

He emerged as one of president Harding’s closest advisors and remained a pivotal voice in the succeeding administration of Calvin Coolidge. During the disastrous Mississippi flood of 1927, Hoover again stepped into the breach and seemingly saved the day. He was once again the hero of the hour, and once again there was a “battle in Hoover’s breast between humility and the desire for recognition.” By the time Silent Cal had counted himself out of the 1928 election, Hoover was the overwhelming favorite for the Republican nomination. He walked to easy victory in 1928, the first election he ever stood for, defeating the wet, Catholic Al Smith.

The stock market crash of 1929 hit just seven months into Hoover’s presidency. The economy would thus dominate his administration from the very start. At first blush, it appeared that the man and moment had met. “When the markets blew out in 1929,” Whyte writes, “[Hoover] had genuinely believed that his mastery and hard work could keep the economy on its hinges.” After all, he had made his career on crisis management. Indeed, “few men alive could match for depth and breadth Hoover’s perspective on the global economy,” according to Whyte. And the new president jumped into action. Economists and journalists at the time praised Hoover for what was, according to the author, “easily the most sophisticated response to a major economic event by an administration.” The economic downturn, however, proved intractable. After several false dawns, the economy dipped lower and lower into depression. Hoover was driven mad by his failure to tame the economic beast. He looked everywhere for answers. He even read analyses of the causes and duration of every economic downturn dating back to the Napoleonic Wars.

Hoover’s views on the disaster were shared by most leading economists and policymakers. He believed it was rooted in World War I and thus was centered in central Europe. He also firmly believed that a balanced federal budget was necessary for recovery, leading him to cut government spending and raise taxes in the teeth of economic disaster. He also placed emphasis on a stable financial system. His novel Reconstruction Finance Corporation was the centerpiece of his depression-fighting scheme. “After three years of backbreaking work,” Whyte writes, “Hoover had in fact stopped the depression in its tracks and by most relevant measures had forced its retreat.” It would be too little, too late to save his presidency.

Trounced by FDR in 1932, Hoover instantly became the popular new president’s fiercest critic. To Hoover the New Deal was “a muddle of uncoordinated and reckless adventures in government … a radical departure from the foundations of 150 years which have made this the greatest nation in the world.” He desperately wanted to stay in public life, but his party did not want him. As one contemporary mused, “Hoover is poison…he is a sort of political typhoid carrier.” Consigned to the political margins, much of Hoover’s post-presidency years were frustrating and lonely, but not unproductive. He wrote as many as five books in retirement and made countless speeches as he sought to define conservatism in the twentieth century. He died at the age of 90, living longer than any US president except John Adams.
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Bent cover

The product was suppose to be brand new.
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Truly an extraordinary life!

Great book - very well written. I knew virtually nothing about Hoover prior to reading this, and learned so much.
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Only Halfway Through & Love This Book

My elderly German neighbor was talking about Hooverspeisungen - free school lunches that he received as a kid after the war. Hoover only made me think Hoovervilles, so I was looking for a book that might explain. I'm only halfway through, but this is a great book. It made me write my first ever Amazon review, so that's really saying something.
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Great reference book.

My son received great information from this book for his essay.
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Excellent read

Inside look at the life of a fascinating American. They dot teach this kind of history in school.
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Excellent read

Inside look at the life of a fascinating American. They dot teach this kind of history in school.
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Well written biography of a misunderstood President

I enjoyed reading this book and learned a great real about President Hoover.
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Love this book

An fantastic book about an awesome man. It’s a long read but easy because the author style kept my interest.