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Library of American Biography

This series delves into the lives of significant figures in American history. Each volume offers a compelling look at the key individuals who shaped the nation. Explore their triumphs, struggles, and enduring legacies through these in-depth biographies. It's essential reading for anyone interested in the American narrative and the people who forged it.

Harry S. Truman and the Modern American Presidency
Woodrow Wilson and the politics of morality
Abraham Lincoln and The Union

Recommended Reading Order

  • Woodrow Wilson came to political power in the United States at a time when many Americans were troubled by a seeming contradiction between the inherent premises and promises of American life and reality. For, as the nineteenth century gave way to the complexities of the twentieth, government was too often characterized by an ineffectiveness in dealing with international tensions and by an inability to resolve internal stress. To these problems Wilson brought the Christian morality and nineteenth-century liberalism of his Presbyterian background and genteel education. He developed an inspirational faith in the powers of a new morality to lead men to find and correct the maladies of the body politic and, indeed, of the world itself. He led Congress to great achievements and his party to large triumphs. And while his inflexibility caused him to fail in his hopes for his greatest project, the League of Nations, his failure was for that time only, as history has since made abundantly clear. -- from Book Jacket

    Woodrow Wilson and the politics of morality