<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Featuring an amazing cast of characters from the worlds of politics, athletics, entertainment and more, this is the story of how President Theodore Roosevelt helped shepherd in a sports and fitness revolution that forever changed the complexion of the United States.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>Featuring an amazing cast of historical figures, this is the story of how President Theodore Roosevelt led an American sports and fitness revolution.</b> <p/> Give up exercise, Theodore Roosevelt was told by a doctor while attending Harvard, or you might die of a heart attack! This after being plagued by crippling asthma, myopic eyesight, and other ailments as a child. Roosevelt's body was his weakness, the one hill he could never conquer. <p/> But, oh, how he tried! <p/> In vivid detail, <i>The Strenuous Life</i> shows how Roosevelt developed an obsession with athletics, carried it to the nation's highest office, and championed a new age of American athleticism. As President, Roosevelt boxed, practiced Ju-Jitsu, played tennis, conducted harrowing point-to-point walks, and invited athletes to the White House. He also made certain that each of his children played sports. Not surprisingly, Roosevelt's personal quest had broad reverberations. During his administration, America saw an unprecedented rise in sports and recreational activities. With Roosevelt in office, baseball's first ever World Series took place, interscholastic sports began, and schools placed a legitimate emphasis on physical education. Additionally, the NCAA formed, and the United States hosted the Olympics for the first time. <p/> Yes, the Bull Moose, as he'd come to be known, resided squarely in the midst of this upheaval. Filled with amazing anecdotes, a who's who of American political and sports figures from the early 20th century, and Rooseveltian gusto and humor, this book is the play-by-play and color commentary on Roosevelt's Strenuous Life. <p/><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"An engaging book you can hold with one hand while doing light bicep curls with the other...Swanson succeeds in telling stories that will be entertaining for readers without any previous knowledge of Roosevelt, as well as those who don't closely follow sports." <br>--<i>Washington Post</i> <p/> "Ryan Swanson, a history professor at the University of New Mexico, [is] one of those enterprising academics who have perfected slicing American history into ever finer layers...Roosevelt is such a compelling figure that the book snaps awake when he's in action." <br>--<i>Wall Street Journal</i> <p/> "There can hardly be a better companion for a romp through American history than TR, and Ryan Swanson's <i>The Strenuous Life</i> captures the great man in all his vividness. Through the sheer force of his personality, Roosevelt changed the way Americans take their leisure--and their sports--and ushered in the age of mass participation in athletics. Swanson takes this facet of Roosevelt's legacy and makes a compelling case that this is the way in which he most powerfully shaped us as a people. This is important stuff--and fun to boot."<br> --Jeremy Schaap, ESPN Journalist and <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author <p/> A contemporary described Theodore Roosevelt, America's most peripatetic president, as 'pure act.' He prefigured modern America, including its passion for competitive sports. Ryan Swanson shows how the person who turned himself from a sickly youth into a robust man saw athletics as means of making a muscular nation. <br> --George F. Will <p/> "Do Nick Saban, Dabo Swinney, Mike Krzyzewski, and John Calipari realize that when they cash one of those hefty paychecks they should be thanking the 26th President of the United States? For, thanks to Ryan Swanson, we know that college sports as we know it owes a huge debt of gratitude to Theodore Roosevelt, surely the most obsessively strenuously fit man ever to reside at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, and someone who believed firmly that sport and competition maketh the man. No fiction writer could concoct a more amazingly complex presidential character than Teddy Roosevelt, and Ryan Swanson captures him in all his bombastic genius. Perhaps the most important tidbit unearthed by Ryan Swanson: be aware that if summoned by Teddy Roosevelt to 'take a walk, ' leave the dress shoes and good outfit at home. It is not going to be a Harry Truman 'constitutional.'"<br> --Bob Ryan, <i>Boston Globe</i> and ESPN, winner of the PEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing <p/> "A fascinating account of president Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1918) and his influence on sports in America.... Sports fans and history buffs alike will enjoy this focused portrait." <br> --<i>Publishers Weekly</i> <p/> So Teddy Roosevelt, President of the United States, invites a few of his advisers for a little five-mile walk along the Potomac River. There's an assistant secretary of state, a major general in the U.S. Army, the French ambassador, and 'a couple other guys.' They ditch the secret service, climb a few ragged stretches of rock, take off their clothes, swim naked in the river's swirling and dangerous waters, return damp and dirty to the White House and resume work and Teddy didn't even worry about how his hair looked.... Read this joyous book about the birth of Roosevelt's 'strenuous life' and sport in America. This is great fun. Teddy got everything rolling.<br> --Leigh Montville, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero</i> and <i>The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth</i> <p/> <i>The Strenuous Life</i> is essential reading for anyone who cares about the history of sports in America. In luminous prose, Ryan Swanson shows how, as athlete and president, Teddy Roosevelt shaped the contests we play, watch, and to which we are gloriously addicted." <br> --Michael Kazin, author of <i>War against War: The American Fight for Peace, 1914-1918</i> <p/> "It seemed as if Theodore Roosevelt's biographers had closed the book on his life story. But Ryan Swanson has uncovered an untold chapter in Roosevelt's life. His work reveals how Teddy Roosevelt, the forefather of the 'Strenuous Life, ' became America's first sports president, shaping the country's obsessions with sports at a pivotal moment in American history." <br> --Johnny Smith, author of <i>Blood Brothers: The Fatal Friendship between Muhammad Ali and Malcom X</i> <p/> "Offers a window into the sporting culture that influenced Roosevelt's life and vice versa...This work adds intriguing depth to Roosevelt histories. Highly recommended."<br> --<i>Library Journal</i> <p/> In <i>The Strenuous Life</i>, Ryan Swanson does a superb job of illuminating how America's 26th president helped propel the concept of 'wellness' long before it was fashionable, during an era when modern sports was still in its infancy. The press of the day gobbled up Roosevelt's practices and pronouncements, and history buffs will likely gobble up this book.<br> --<i>Washington Independent Review of Books</i> <p/> "Peppered with expertly researched anecdotes...<i>The Strenuous Life</i> is an extraordinary look into a lesser-studied aspect of American History, thoroughly accessible to scholars and lay readers alike...Highly recommended."<br> --<i>Midwest Book Review</i> <p/> "The sports fan is going to love <i>The Strenuous Life</i>."<br> --<i>The Bookworm Sez</i> <p/> "In the richly detailed new book, <i>The Strenuous Life</i>, Swanson tells the story of Roosevelt's personal fitness odyssey and incredible athletic boosterism, and how it changed America."<br> --<i>Brooklyn Digest</i> <p/> "Introduces a further side of a President already celebrated for skill as a soldier and statesman. It's a wonderful tale of the asthmatic boy, encouraged by his father to be a sportsman, emphasizing effort to be more important than success on the field or the tennis court...Whether or not one is a Teddy Roosevelt admirer or a sports junkie, the book's detail and humor are captivating."<br> --<i>Manhattan Book Review</i> <p/><br>
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