Reconstructing the story from the long-lost journals and diaries of the 1903 and 1905 expeditions; James Davidson and John Rugge trace the explorers' routes and re-create the saga. 'Great Heart' is a gripping drama of individuals pushed to the limits of human endurance.
#8418 in Books Candice Millard 2012 2012-06-12Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 7.99 x .85 x 5.19l; .90 #File Name: 0767929713432 pagesDestiny of the Republic A Tale of Madness Medicine and the Murder of a President
Review
603 of 611 people found the following review helpful. A dead president brought to lifeBy TChrisJames Garfield is most often remembered; if at all; as the president who was assassinated shortly after taking office. Destiny of the Republic brings the dead president back to life. This is not; however; a biography of Garfield. Rather; it is a stirring account of American life and politics during the time of the Garfield presidency; not long after the conclusion of the Civil War; and of a presidential murder. Garfield's early years are sketched out in cursory fashion; his (sometimes troubled) relationship with and eventual devotion to his wife Lucretia is covered in only a few pages; and the death of his youngest child receives little more than a mention. Rather than focusing on Garfield's personal life; Candice Millard devotes her attention to political divisions within the Republican Party (particularly Garfield's battles with New York Senator Roscoe Conkling and the vice president he controlled); as well as Garfield's frustration with the obligations of the office that he had little desire to hold.The president's assassin is given nearly as much attention as the president. There are times when the book has the feel of a thriller; as the ominous Charles Guiteau weaves in and out of the text; inching himself closer to the president. Millard depicts Guiteau as a con man with delusions of grandeur whose madness was characterized by a growing belief that his plan to assassinate Garfield was divinely inspired.The assassination occurs at the book's midway point. Millard then treats us to a different kind of political battle; a medical drama about doctors who vie for the opportunity to treat the president and who; ironically; become responsible for his death. Arrogant in their refusal to believe in the existence of germs; American doctors rejected evidence that antiseptic surgical conditions increase a patient's chance of survival. The dirty finger and unwashed probes inserted into Garfield's wound in search of a bullet sealed the president's fate; infecting an injury that Garfield would likely have survived if left untreated. The book concludes with an account of Garfield's autopsy and Guiteau's trial.Destiny of the Republic succeeds on two levels. First; it is informative. Millard fills the text with interesting facts culled from a variety of primary and secondary source materials; including frequent quotations from contemporaneous news stories and Garfield's diary; to set the scene for Garfield's presidency. We learn enough about the man to understand that he would have made an admirable president. It's interesting to note that Garfield; despite his love of farming; was a scholar; a professor of literature and ancient languages; well versed in mathematics and keenly interested in science; the sort of man who; if running for office today; would likely be branded an "elitist." Garfield's speeches condemning slavery and the unequal treatment of black Americans are eloquent and moving; the book is worth reading for those passages alone.Second; the book is entertaining. Millard's prose is lively. She captures personalities as if she were writing a novel. She seasons the narrative with humor and creates tension as the events leading to Garfield's encounter with Guiteau unfold. Despite its attention to detail; the narrative moves at a brisk pace.My sole complaint concerns the attention that Millard gives to Alexander Graham Bell. Granted that Bell's life intersected with Garfield's more than once; and that Bell worked diligently to invent a device that would pinpoint the location of the bullet lodged in Garfield's body; the full chapter and parts of several others devoted to Bell's life seem out of place; as if Millard felt the need to pad her relatively short book with filler. I would have preferred a more thorough discussion of the political aftermath of the shooting. Millard tells us of its unifying effect on a nation that emerged from the Civil War still deeply divided; but provides few facts to support that proposition. A more extensive look at the impact of the assassination on the country would have been more germane than the pages devoted to Bell's life before and after his invention of the telephone.That criticism aside; Destiny of the Republic is perfect for readers (like me) who want to know about a key moment in American history without being subjected to mind-numbing detail or leaden prose. Millard's book is enlightening and enjoyable. Garfield is a dead president I'm happy to have met.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Of Millard's Three Books; This May Have the Widest AppealBy Eros FaustHaving read all three of Candice Millard's three books; I have trouble deciding which on I like the best---but this might be it. James Garfield; who was only President for four months before being shot; is noone's candidate for America's greatest President. However; after reading this compelling portrait you realize that he could have been; had he not died from infection.Millard weaves together interesting stories into a single moving tapestry---the assassin; the shipwreck; the Centennial Exposition; the invention of the telephone; and the reluctance of physicians to consider "germs" to be real---all come together in the telling of the story.Because the author isn't tethered to one man--Garfield---she's free to tell the stories of many men and women. Her exploration of the love affair between Lucretia and James (I won't give away their secret) will ring true to people even today.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Ripping YarnBy Layton P.This lady has one of the most interesting and erudite styles of writing in that is seems as if I was watching a movie.I had only a passing knowledge of the details of Garfield's assassination; Charles Guiteau; or the bungling ineptitude of the security measures of the day.The descriptions of the physicians' attempts to dig and probe the president searching for the bullet; while seemingly ignorant of the basic tenets of cleanliness; are almost unbearable.The book is sourced to a fault as most of this information is public record; but Ms. Millard brings history to life while seeming chatty and informative.There's no dry pedantry here; just a gut churning empathy for a man who is slowly being tortured to death by his doctors.Millard's book about Theodore Roosevelt's adventure is another page turner that I highly recommend.