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First Dogs: American Presidents and Their Best Friends » (Expanded)

Book cover image of First Dogs: American Presidents and Their Best Friends by Roy Rowan

Authors: Roy Rowan, Brooke Janis
ISBN-13: 9781565129368, ISBN-10: 1565129369
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Date Published: June 2009
Edition: Expanded

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Author Biography: Roy Rowan

Roy Rowan has been a correspondent and editor for Life, Time, and Fortune and has contributed to other major magazines. He is the author of numerous books and articles on business, foreign affairs, and politics, including The Intuitive Manager, The Four Days of Mayaguez, and Powerful People. He lives in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Brooke Janis is a longtime television producer who has worked for CBS news and other national media. She lives in New York City.

Book Synopsis

"If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog," Harry Truman once said. Perhaps that's why, for much of our Republic's history, there have been two top dogs at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue—one with two legs, one with four. First Dogs, by distinguished journalist Roy Rowan and researcher Brooke Janis, tells the whole doggone story, from the days before there was a White House to Barack Obama’s newly adopted presidential pup, Bo.

Here's a lighthearted romp through American history, packed with drawings and paintings from early America, plus photographs, starting with Abraham Lincoln's Fido. Not only did these four-footed goodwill ambassadors humanize their distinguished masters, they offered them a little unconditional love in a loveless town.

First Dogs gives dog lovers and history lovers a new angle on presidential history and is more fun than you can shake a stick (or rubber bone) at.

Publishers Weekly

Rowan, a Time-Life correspondent, and Janis, a photo researcher, take a promising premiseshowing the history of the presidency in terms of presidents' dogsbut come up empty. While they diligently excavate facts and pictures related to presidents and their pets, they string together their research without benefit of analysis or imagination. At times their presentation is dunderheaded ("On April 14, 1865, with the Civil War won, Lincoln was shot by actor John Wilkes Booth; he died the next day"); more often coyness substitutes for wit ("The circumstances surrounding [the death of then governor Bill Clinton's dog] are unclear, and so far the Whitewater Special Counsel has not investigated them"). The authors miss obvious opportunities for exploring the political ramifications of dog ownership. For example, they recycle the canard about FDR spending $15,000 of taxpayer revenues to fetch his famous dog, Fala, from the Aleutian Islands; and put a fig leaf over the embarrassment Ronald Reagan suffered on account of his unruly Bouvier with the statement, ridiculous to anyone who has ever trained a dog, that "size, not behavior, was the problem." Readers with an interest in dogs or history deserve better. Photos. First serial to Smithsonian magazine. (June)

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