Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading

View through CrossRef
President Theodore Roosevelt had a passion for reading books, and he did not keep this passion to himself. He often wrote about his experiences as a reader and collector of books. He wrote scholarly essays about literature and literary history. He often wrote book reviews for such publications as The Atlantic Monthly, The Bookman, The Outlook, and The New York Times Review of Books. Roosevelt’s writings about books are worth reading for their own sake, for in these pieces he provided critical insights into influential books. His writings about books, however, are also important because they show how Roosevelt responded to the books that he read. Roosevelt’s reading influenced his thinking on the many topics that interested him, so these writings provide researchers with a better understanding of the role that books played in the formation of his ideas, attitudes, and political positions. Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading brings together for the first time Roosevelt’s writings about his experiences as a reader, his scholarly essays about literature and literary history, and his exuberant reviews of some of the books that he especially liked. A sister volume to Mark I. West’s Theodore Roosevelt and His Library at Sagamore Hill, this new volume features Roosevelt’s own responses to many of the books in his personal library. All of the selections in this volume reflect Roosevelt’s passion for reading. These selections will resonate with anyone who shares Roosevelt’s love of books.
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Title: Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading
Description:
President Theodore Roosevelt had a passion for reading books, and he did not keep this passion to himself.
He often wrote about his experiences as a reader and collector of books.
He wrote scholarly essays about literature and literary history.
He often wrote book reviews for such publications as The Atlantic Monthly, The Bookman, The Outlook, and The New York Times Review of Books.
Roosevelt’s writings about books are worth reading for their own sake, for in these pieces he provided critical insights into influential books.
His writings about books, however, are also important because they show how Roosevelt responded to the books that he read.
Roosevelt’s reading influenced his thinking on the many topics that interested him, so these writings provide researchers with a better understanding of the role that books played in the formation of his ideas, attitudes, and political positions.
Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading brings together for the first time Roosevelt’s writings about his experiences as a reader, his scholarly essays about literature and literary history, and his exuberant reviews of some of the books that he especially liked.
A sister volume to Mark I.
West’s Theodore Roosevelt and His Library at Sagamore Hill, this new volume features Roosevelt’s own responses to many of the books in his personal library.
All of the selections in this volume reflect Roosevelt’s passion for reading.
These selections will resonate with anyone who shares Roosevelt’s love of books.

Related Results

Incidental Collocation Learning from Different Modes of Input and Factors That Affect Learning
Incidental Collocation Learning from Different Modes of Input and Factors That Affect Learning
Collocations, i.e., words that habitually co-occur in texts (e.g., strong coffee, heavy smoker), are ubiquitous in language and thus crucial for second/foreign language (L2) learne...
Theodore Roosevelt, 1858–1919
Theodore Roosevelt, 1858–1919
Theodore Roosevelt became the twenty-sixth president of the United States in September 1901 following the assassination of William McKinley. He won election in his own right in 190...
Theodore Roosevelt: Father of a Sporting Nation
Theodore Roosevelt: Father of a Sporting Nation
Theodore Roosevelt was, in many ways, the father of a sporting nation. Roosevelt, more than any president before, and perhaps since, sought to bind the presidency to the ideas of m...
Branje mladih leta 2009 in leta 2018 ter razlike v branju glede na spol in izobraževalni program
Branje mladih leta 2009 in leta 2018 ter razlike v branju glede na spol in izobraževalni program
Reading of the youth in 2009 and 2018: differences according to gender and national study programme The article presents reading characteristics of 15-year olds, as assessed in the...
Theodore Roosevelt 1858–1919
Theodore Roosevelt 1858–1919
In style and in substance, Theodore Roosevelt, who occupied the White House from 1901 to 1909, was the first modern American president. A gifted and courageous politician and a nat...
The Russian schoolchildren's digital reading: Factors affecting medium preferences and self-evaluation of digital reading practice
The Russian schoolchildren's digital reading: Factors affecting medium preferences and self-evaluation of digital reading practice
Introduction. While the importance of digital reading in modern education is constantly increasing, there are some knowledge gaps in investigating reading patterns (reading digital...
Reading Culture in the Digital World
Reading Culture in the Digital World
The purpose of this study is to explore and to identify the existing problems of modern reading and to suggest possible solutions. The study focuses on the role of different forms ...
Trust in the Lord and Do Good, 1876‒1886
Trust in the Lord and Do Good, 1876‒1886
Abstract This chapter begins by exploring Roosevelt’s four years at Harvard College. The death of his father in 1878 prompted extended religious musings and the clea...

Back to Top