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Mornings on Horseback: The Story of an Extraordinary Family, a Vanished Way of Life and the Unique Child Who Became Theodore Roosevelt » (~)

Book cover image of Mornings on Horseback: The Story of an Extraordinary Family, a Vanished Way of Life and the Unique Child Who Became Theodore Roosevelt by David McCullough

Authors: David McCullough
ISBN-13: 9780671447540, ISBN-10: 0671447548
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: May 1982
Edition: ~

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Author Biography: David McCullough

It s a rare historian who can write books that appeal to a huge popular audience while sacrificing none of his integrity as a scholar and researcher. But David McCullough has managed just that. In his thoughtful, considered, and intensely readable histories of American events and figures, McCullough has become one of our most trustworthy and fascinating chroniclers of our nation s life and times.

Book Synopsis


Mornings on Horseback is the brilliant biography of the young Theodore Roosevelt. Hailed as "a masterpiece" (John A. Gable, Newsday), it is the winner of the Los Angeles Times 1981 Book Prize for Biography and the National Book Award for Biography. Written by David McCullough, the author of Truman, this is the story of a remarkable little boy, seriously handicapped by recurrent and almost fatal asthma attacks, and his struggle to manhood: an amazing metamorphosis seen in the context of the very uncommon household in which he was raised.

The father is the first Theodore Roosevelt, a figure of unbounded energy, enormously attractive and selfless, a god in the eyes of his small, frail namesake. The mother, Mittie Bulloch Roosevelt, is a Southerner and a celebrated beauty, but also considerably more, which the book makes clear as never before. There are sisters Anna and Corinne, brother Elliott (who becomes the father of Eleanor Roosevelt), and the lovely, tragic Alice Lee, TR's first love. All are brought to life to make "a beautifully told story, filled with fresh detail", wrote The New York Times Book Review.

A book to be read on many levels, it is at once an enthralling story, a brilliant social history and a work of important scholarship which does away with several old myths and breaks entirely new ground. It is a book about life intensely lived, about family love and loyalty, about grief and courage, about "blessed" mornings on horseback beneath the wide blue skies of the Badlands.

The New York Times - John Leonard

We have no better social historian.

Table of Contents

Author's Note9
Part 1
1Greatheart's Circle19
2Lady from the South39
3Grand Tour69
4A Disease of the Direst Suffering90
5Metamorphosis109
Part 2
6Uptown131
7The Moral Effect149
8Father and Son160
Part 3
9Harvard195
10Especially Pretty Alice218
11Home Is the Hunter237
12Politics251
13Strange and Terrible Fate277
14Chicago289
15Glory Days316
16Return351
Afterword362
Notes373
Bibliography413
Index427

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