Wednesday, February 13, 2013

In My TBR Stack:

Coolidge
by Amity Shlaes
Harper / Harper Collins
Hardcover

From the publisher website:


Amity Shlaes, author of The Forgotten Man, delivers a brilliant and provocative reexamination of America’s thirtieth president, Calvin Coolidge, and the decade of unparalleled growth that the nation enjoyed under his leadership. In this riveting biography, Shlaes traces Coolidge’s improbable rise from a tiny town in New England to a youth so unpopular he was shut out of college fraternities at Amherst College up through Massachusetts politics. After a divisive period of government excess and corruption, Coolidge restored national trust in Washington and achieved what few other peacetime presidents have: He left office with a federal budget smaller than the one he inherited. A man of calm discipline, he lived by example, renting half of a two-family house for his entire political career rather than compromise his political work by taking on debt. Renowned as a throwback, Coolidge was in fact strikingly modern—an advocate of women’s suffrage and a radio pioneer. At once a revision of man and economics, Coolidge gestures to the country we once were and reminds us of qualities we had forgotten and can use today.   
          Book Description
Calvin Coolidge, who served as president from 1923 to 1929, never rated highly in polls. The shy Vermonter, nicknamed "Silent Cal," has long been dismissed as quiet and passive. History has remembered the decade in which he served as a frivolous, extravagant period predating the Great Depression. Now Amity Shlaes, the author known for her riveting, unexpected portrait of the 1930s, provides a similarly fresh look at the 1920s and its elusive president. Shlaes shows that the mid-1920s was, in fact, a triumphant period that established our modern way of life: the nation electrified, Americans drove their first cars, and the federal deficit was replaced with a surplus. Coolidge is an eye-opening biography of the little-known president behind that era of remarkable growth and national optimism.
 Although Coolidge was sometimes considered old-fashioned, he was the most modern of presidents, advancing not only the automobile trade but also aviation, through his spirited support of Charles Lindbergh. Coolidge's discipline and composure, Shlaes reveals, represented not weakness but strength. First as governor of Massachusetts then as president, Coolidge proved unafraid to take on the divisive issues of this crucial period: reining in public-sector unions, unrelentingly curtailing spending, and rejecting funding for new interest groups.
Perhaps more than any other president, Coolidge understood that doing less could yield more. He reduced the federal budget during his time in office even as the economy grew, wages rose, tax rates fell, and unemployment dropped. As a husband, father, and citizen, the thirtieth president made an equally firm commitment to moderation, shunning lavish parties and special presidential treatment; to him the presidency was not a bully pulpit but a place for humble service. Overcoming private tragedy while in office, including the death of a son, Coolidge showed the nation how to persevere by persevering himself. For a nation looking for a steady hand, he was a welcome pilot.
 In this illuminating, magisterial biography, Amity Shlaes finally captures the remarkable story of Calvin Coolidge and the decade of extraordinary prosperity that grew from his leadership.

1 comment:

  1. Because there is a comment box and because I happened here...

    "As previously noted, if you were a sufficiently honest and competent researcher located like Amity Shlaes near any number of world-class reference libraries simply out to find out the unemployment rate in the 1930s, you would not find the data Shlaes cites; you would find, in the authoritative reference work, an explanation of why it’s not best to cite the data Shlaes cites. Shlaes has to go out of her way to find other data."
    http://chronicle.com/blognetwork/edgeofthewest/2009/04/23/how-denialism-works/

    "The sad fact is that conservo ideologues like Shlaes can get away with their revisionism because too few of our countrymen know the facts of our economic and political history enough to challenge these miscreants....or to do the necessary digging in informed sources to be able to see through the rubbish."
    http://brane-space.blogspot.com/2012/04/amity-shlaes-shills-again.html

    "Just how reactionary is Shlaes? She traces our problems to such pernicious developments as the direct election of senators, women’s suffrage, and allowing people who are not property owners to vote (266). She is not just anti-Democrat; she is anti-democracy."
    http://tinyurl.com/c9aq5wt

    "Shlaes builds the superstructure of her argument upon an impressive but understandable foundation of gelatinous ignorance, since an inventory of all New Deal public works has never been compiled--until now. The California Living New Deal Project is an attempt to do that for the State of California. Like an archaeological dig, it is revealing the lost civilization that was our own, as well as the extent to which we--and the market--are indebted to agencies that few today can identify. We have yet to generously acknowledge--as we do the efforts of wartime veterans--the vast contributions made by the forgotten men and women whom those agencies saved from destitution, desperation and revolutionary violence that would not have served Wall Street well. As Shlaes once again demonstrates, it has never forgiven Roosevelt for doing so."
    http://www.thenation.com/letter/empty-title-2585

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