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Eleanor Roosevelt, Vol. 1: 1884-1933 by…
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Eleanor Roosevelt, Vol. 1: 1884-1933 (original 1992; edition 1993)

by Blanche Wiesen Cook

Series: Eleanor Roosevelt (Volume 1)

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1,074918,915 (4.13)31
A study of the complex and political figure of Eleanor Roosevelt begins with her harrowing childhood, describes the difficulties of her marriage, and explains how she persuaded Franklin to make the reforms that would make him famous.
Member:y2pk
Title:Eleanor Roosevelt, Vol. 1: 1884-1933
Authors:Blanche Wiesen Cook
Info:Penguin (1993), Paperback, 608 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:Nonfiction, Biography and Memoir, History, American History, Presidents, Women, Trade Paperback

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Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume 1: 1884-1933 by Blanche Wiesen Cook (1992)

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Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
Fabulous, detailed and pulls no punches. ( )
  klandring | Nov 4, 2020 |
I picked up this volume and the second one as they looked interesting and I liked the idea of photos to give a little visual to such historic times. What I found was interesting but also a huge dose of historical information. A bit more than I was looking for, hence the long time to read the book.

Eleanor Roosevelt was a complicated woman and a bit of a rebel. Born and raised in Victorian times (1884) with Victorian morals she found that she had to change with the turning of the century (1900). Having lived with negative criticism the majority of her life, the changes brought with the new century gave her the chance to become who she really was and be involved in what she felt were important issues and what she had a passion for.

She lived two lives - her public and her personal - and she strove to keep them completely separate, especially keeping her private life out of the public eye. This book gives a view of both worlds.

Blanche Wiesen Cook has done an excellent job of providing sources for her information and giving background on such a complicated person and time. I appreciate this as it gives me a more complete picture of the person and time.

If you are big on historical biographies this will be great. Filled with names, events, dates and more of what was going on in the world between 1884 and 1933. It takes you from Eleanor's childhood to FDR's election to President. ( )
  ChazziFrazz | Jun 23, 2016 |
Volume 1 of this 3 part biography covers ER from birth up through the 1932 election victory. I love this marvelous woman and was thrilled to know so much more about her. The author does not shy away from ER's personal problem with her mother-in-law and with her unfaithful husband; she tells of the importance of ER's relationships with the women in her life and with bodyguard Earl Miller. All-in-all, a wonderful biography. ( )
  gbelik | Oct 6, 2015 |
What a fascinating woman was Eleanor Roosevelt! Blanche Wiesen Cook's excellent biography (to which I would have given five stars had the omission of source for a rather disturbing quotation not made me question her research) allows ER to live on the page and often to speak for herself. For the most part, Cook presents the relevant material and allows the reader to draw her own conclusions.
ER was a daughter of the Oyster Bay Roosevelts who married a son of the Hyde Park Roosevelts. Her mother was cold to her; her father adored her and she him, but his alcoholism separated him from his family. Taken in by her grandmother after their deaths, she was eventually exposed to a superior teacher who taught her to expand and trust her brilliant mind. Her marriage to FDR was a love match which he betrayed in 1918, from which time ER learned to shape her life in order to be useful and loved as she was able.
The last two thirds of the book follows her on this quest and necessarily also introduces the ins and outs of the feminist movement of the twenties and the politics of New York and the nation.
ER herself emerges with the vulnerabilities of a child of an alcoholic and with the courage of an indomitable spirit. I'm very much looking forward to volume 2! ( )
11 vote LizzieD | Jun 19, 2013 |
I think it goes without saying that Eleanor Roosevelt was a fascinating person both in and out of the political arena. What astounds me the most is how Cook could write such a thorough biography despite so much of Eleanor's personal correspondence either lost or destroyed. I am in awe of what Cook could have done if she had everything ER had ever written. Here's what we do know - research has concluded that Eleanor had an unhappy childhood. She grew up shy and awkward. She a cold mother who died when Eleanor was eight and a father who was practically nonexistent. Research also supports her unhappy marriage to Franklin D. Roosevelt, a man who was clearly a mama's boy and did nothing to hide his adulterous indiscretions. All of Eleanor's political and humanitarian endeavors and alliances are carefully documented. All the facts about Eleanor Roosevelt as a historical icon are there. But what Cook is able to illustrate in meticulous detail is Mrs. Roosevelt's courageous, determined, caring personality. Once ER found independence she sought to better herself at every chance she got. She surrounded herself with men and women who would become lifelong friends. There is so much detail to Cook's biography that you feel as though you've just had a conversation with Eleanor herself about her life's work. My only complaint? As an "out" lesbian I felt Cook was trying too hard to find the lesbian angle with ER's relationship with Lorena Hickok, among others. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Aug 23, 2012 |
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Epigraph
The big question before our people today is whether we are to be more material in our thinking, judging administrative success by tis economic results entirely and leaving out all other achievements. History shows that a nation interested primarily in material things invariably is on a downward path. Great wealth has ruined every nation since the day that Cheops laid the corner stone of the Great Pyramid, not because of any inherent wrong in wealth, but because it became the ideal and the idol of the people. Phoenicia, Carthage, Greece, Rome, Spain, all bear witness to this truth.
--Eleanor Roosevelt, 1927
It takes courage to love, but pain through love is the purifying fire which those who live generously know.
--Eleanor Roosevelt, | April 1939
Dedication
For CLARE M. COSS
Every day in each season,
a life of politics and art
First words
[Preface and Acknowledgements] This book was in part made possible by a movement--led and informed by women and men who have in the past twenty years transformed the craft of biography and enlarged the contours our our learning traditions.
[Introduction] Her very presence lit up the room.
The first words of Eleanor Roosevelt's Memoirs are: "My mother was one of the most beautiful women I have ever seen."
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A study of the complex and political figure of Eleanor Roosevelt begins with her harrowing childhood, describes the difficulties of her marriage, and explains how she persuaded Franklin to make the reforms that would make him famous.

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Book description
The first volume of a projected two-volume biography. Historian (CUNY) and journalist Cook draws upon previously untapped sources including recently opened archives, FBI and State Department documents, and letters of long-obscured friends to restore a goodly dose of human passion to the iconic humanitarian. Volume one spans the years from Eleanor's birth to her husband Franklin Delano's inauguration. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.
Haiku summary
Much beloved; unloved -
Young Eleanor Roosevelt -
She made her own life

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