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## PDF Download Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal

PDF Download Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal

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Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal

Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal



Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal

PDF Download Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal

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Alice Roosevelt Longworth, by Carol Felsenthal

Alice Roosevelt Longworth

  • Sales Rank: #1468579 in Books
  • Published on: 1988-03-09
  • Released on: 1988-03-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.34" h x 1.23" w x 9.32" l,
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 320 pages

From Publishers Weekly
This biography of a White House enfant terriblea dashing beauty in a broad-brimmed hat, witty and eccentric enough to dominate Washington society for decadesis also a gossipy chronicle of the American establishment families whose whims have often shaped modern history. President Teddy Roosevelt's eldest, Longworth (1884-1980) was born to privilege and made the most of it. During a lifetime of travels, teas and dinner parties, she pulled social pranks and cast cruel barbs at those who failed her expectations, such as her husband, popular House Speaker Nicholas Longworth, and her reticent daughter Pauline (whose father, the author hints, was Idaho Sen. William Borah). She also despised cousins Eleanor and FDR, but nevertheless demolished his 1944 election opponent, Tom Dewey, as "the little man on the wedding cake." Syndicated book columnist Felsenthal aptly captures period flavor in a narrative well stocked with anecdotes and conversations between the vibrant Longworth and a circle of acquaintances that included the dowager empress of China, Warren G. Harding, Nixon, Joseph McCarthy, Jack and Bobby Kennedy, Castro and Ezra Pound. At age 96, "too frail to support her hats," the darling of public, press and many ambitious politicians died in a decaying Washington mansion once bright with celebrity. Although the biography is lively and interesting, Felsenthal does not probe behind the legend, leaving the reader to wonder whether being a "fascinating conversationalist" merits such lasting notoriety. Photos. BOMC alternate.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Daughter of Theodore Roosevelt, Alice Roosevelt Longworth has been known primarily by two quotations: her father's observation that he could be President or could control young Alice, but could not do both; and her own comment, after a second mastectomy, that she was Washington's "topless octogenarian." Growing up as an unwanted stepchild, Alice early learned to get attention by being outrageous. She was hostess and friend to generations of politicians, from Coolidge to the Kennedys and Nixon (though an implacable enemy of her cousin, FDR). Felsenthal's biography is the best to date, a well done and fascinating account of a fascinating woman. Nancy C. Cridland, Indiana Univ. Libs., Bloomington
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Princess Alice's Portrait
By Acute Observer
This is a very readable book that moves you quickly along this biography of Alice, and her family. Page 16 mentions Teddy's attacks of asthma and cholera morbus, and his interest in animal specimens. Could this exposure to arsenic explain his problems? The book says the Roosevelt family was wealthy, but does not say how it was acquired. TR entered politics after his honeymoon, but the book does not tell why (p.25).
Alice's mother died in childbirth. TR's mother died the same day. Expected happiness was replaced by unexpected sorrow. TR left for the Dakotas where he tried out cattle ranching; he lost most of his fortune in the 1886 drought and the severe winter. He returned to NY and the steady income of a Government job, and married again. Young Alice never knew her mother, but only her stepmother (p.37). Alice grew up lonely with no playmates (p.41). She caught a disease that left one leg shorter than the other. Alice enjoyed her semiannual trip to her Boston grandparents, who spoiled her (p.37). Her stepmother would tell her that her mother was stupid, her father wanted to give her away, and TR proposed to her first and was rejected (p.47)! What a heavy emotional load for an 8 year old! Page 49 tells more about this disfunctional family. Alice was the only female member of an all-boys club where the boys dressed in girls clothes! Alice rejected Christianity and grew up a pagan with no formal education (p.53). Would she be considered an abused child today?
TR's enemies prevented him from a second term as Governor and shunted him off as Vice President. Then a lone gunman appeared and changed Administration policies. Alice began to socialize with the new-monied "Four Hundred" who disregarded old-money proprieties; TR and Edith held them in "high-minded contempt" (p.57). Alice had an income from her mother's parents. Was her behavior a way to gain attention from her parents (p.66)? Does this explain the rest of her life? There is a lesson here for any parents in a similar situation. Alice wrote "Father doesn't care for me ... as much as he does for the other children" (p.70). Alice was anxious to escape her parents by a marriage, like countless other girls from more humble backgrounds. It was a dynastic marriage: she got a rich heir of a Congressman, he got the President's daughter and a political ally. But change continued like a flowing river.
Page 113 shows an old political trick. Get some background facts before meeting a new person, then feed it back as a compliment in feigned admiration. It works every time! Page 129 tells how a political deal was made to keep a Bull Moose candidate out of Nick Longworth's district. Page 130 gives another example of Alice's perverse personality. She bragged about having caused her husband's defeat (p.131)! I wonder if her problems were genetic, or caused by her environment? The rest of the book covers the next 60 years of her life.
Chapters 10 and 11 make it seem that Paulina and the country would have been better off if Alice died in childbirth. What good has she ever done? These portrayals of the members of the Ruling Class will never be printed in your local newspaper.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Brings to life a fascinating character
By AOM
I very much enjoyed this biography. My father told me once that some people write good biographies and some people make good biographies. Alice is an example of the later a biography of her would sparkle almost no matter what. Alice was an uncontrollable personality she disobeyed her famous father she confounded her stepmother she married young and cheated on her husband and lived as the grand dame of Washington society for decades. Carol Felsenthal brings this to life

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Go ask Alice, I Think She Knows (Everybody)
By The 3 Centervilles
Note to the reader: This review contains spoilers, if a review of a biography can have spoilers. The book is out of print, you can’t buy it on Amazon and can probably only get it at a used-bookstore or your local library so I feel as if it’s safe to recount a lot of what’s in the book. You’re probably not ever going to read it.

OK.

Long before the Kardashians or before twitters and tweets, or even before radio and television, America had its sweetheart, a pop-culture icon before there was pop culture – Alice Longworth Roosevelt (1884-1980) the oldest daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt. I’m too old to care one way or the other about the Kardashians but I was always amused by Alice, she of the acid tongue. Alice captivated America for nearly one hundred years, although toward the end, her audience was reduced to a much smaller circle, a circle that, however small, included everybody who mattered in Washington D.C. and some who didn’t matter and only wished they did. Hers was a much sought after imprimatur for any politician seeking the national stage.
Part of Alice’s appeal and of her legacy, was her longevity – from The Spanish-American War to the Iranian hostage crisis. She was a rebellious teenager in the White House at the beginning of the century, (sneaking cigarettes on the roof,) and an acid-tongued commentator for decades afterward, and she comes to life in all her glory in Carol Felsenthal’s brilliant, immensely-readable, gossipy, entertaining, oh so entertaining biography, published in 1988.

Alice was outrageous ─ moments before she died, she impishly stuck her tongue out at her granddaughter’s boyfriend, and clever – she’s credited with having called presidential candidate Thomas Dewey “the little man on the top of a wedding cake,” and to have said about the dour President Coolidge, “he was weaned on a pickle.” It could be Alice didn’t stick her tongue out at the boyfriend or say either of those things, but if she didn’t, she should have and she certainly would have been proud, if she had.

Alice was famous for being famous. The newspapers in the early twentieth century could never get enough of her, nor could the American public. She was adept at titillating, which was, after all, her role. She sassed America’s leaders, smoked in public, stayed out late partying (and sometimes arrived with an eight-foot boa constrictor wrapped around her neck,) and she was never at a loss for words. Her wedding was Princess Di-like, Alice receiving presents from all over the world, including diamonds from the German Kaiser and fabric from the Dowager Empress of China. (Remember “55 days at Peking”? That dowager.)

A storybook life for poor Alice.

Poor Alice?

Her wealth and fame (and there wasn’t so much wealth as maybe what people thought,) could only partially mitigate her unhappy family dynamics. Her dad, Teddy, growing up, was sweet on Edith Carow and the family assumed he’d marry her, which he did, eventually, but not until after he’d gone away to college (from New York to Boston) and met and fell in love with Alice Hathaway Lee and married her. They had a daughter, our Alice. Two days after giving birth, Mrs. Roosevelt died (in the same house and on the same night as Teddy’s mom died, February 14, 1887, Happy Valentines Day, Teddy.)

Teddy immediately took off for the Dakotas and Alice was raised on and off, more or less, by Teddy’s sister, Auntie Bye. Teddy eventually married Edith and they had a large family and Edith and Alice, stepmother and stepchild, didn’t get on so well. Edith felt Alice didn’t know her place, Alice felt her place was wherever she decided it was, and if Alice was famous for put-downs, she found herself on the other side, on her wedding day. Alice and her husband (Congressman and future Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nick Longworth,) were leaving for their honeymoon and Alice went to her stepmother to say goodbye.

“I want you to know I am glad to see you leave,” Edith said. “You have never been anything but trouble.”

Ouch.

Teddy, though often frustrated by his daughter’s antics, was generally amused by her irrepressibility.

Alice had her own standards for judging people, of deciding who would be allowed into her circle and who would be excluded. It was an emphatic no to cousins Franklin and Eleanor. (FDR’s tenure in the White House, fifteen years, was probably longer for Alice than for anyone else.) She liked JFK and LBJ and though a rock-ribbed Republican, she probably voted more than once for the Democratic candidate for president. She liked Nixon although he disappointed her at the end, not because of Watergate but because of his wimpy defense and she wasn’t fond of at least one of Nixon’s daughters. Alice didn’t like Ike, too boring, or Carter, too sanctimonious, or Gerry Ford, although when Alice smacked-down Ford and discovered he wasn’t as easy a target as she’d assumed, she gained some respect for him.

It wasn’t political affiliation that determined a thumbs-up or thumbs down from Alice, it was how well could you converse and banter. Conversation was like tennis, you had to volley, and if Alice didn’t like you, if you didn’t measure up, she might just have you along anyway, to eviscerate you in front of an audience.

One of her most withering put-downs actually came at the expense of someone she adored ─ Bobby Kennedy. It’s shocking and fascinating, like a car wreck.

Alice famously belittled Senator Joe McCarthy, and not because she disapproved of what he was doing. She only turned against him when she decided he was boorish, the wrong man for the work he was doing. She liked the snake-oil, she just didn’t care much for the salesman.

Alice, while married to the speaker of the house, had a daughter by U.S. Senator William Borah. Alice wanted to name the child Deborah. De-borah. Get it? Heh, heh, heh. Nick, fairly certain he’d been cuckolded and already the butt of enough jokes, wouldn’t allow it.

With all of the fascinating characters who pass into and out of the book at Alice’s bidding, there may be none as fascinating as Putzi Hanfstaengl, fascinating because he was so creepy.

Hanfstaengl had a German father and an American mother and spent time in both countries. In America, he often hung out (dallied?) with Alice and in Germany, he was one of the first to hitch his star to Adolph Hitler. Putzi and his wife are each credited with having saved Hitler’s life when Hitler was just starting to find his way in politics. Putzi and Hitler were in a car one day and were stopped by some German communists. It was the time when the fascists and the communists were contending for control of Germany and the communists at the roadblock were considering killing Hitler and maybe would have, had Putzi not convinced them Hitler was just a valet. Later on and with Hitler’s career seemingly stalled, he was depressed and about to blow his brains out and would have, had Putzi’s wife not talked him out of it.

A lot of what Alice said and did was funny and had people shaking their heads but it wasn’t all funny. Paulina, the daughter by the prominent senator, lived in mortal terror of her mom, so much terror that whenever in the presence of her mom, the poor girl fell completely apart, stuttering and shaking uncontrollably. Paulina eventually found and married a man who wasn’t intimidated by Alice but the marriage only lasted a few years. The husband drank himself to death and five years later, Paulina committed suicide.

Nothing funny about that.

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