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Reviews for Room of Her Own at the Top: Women Prime Ministers and Presidents

 Room of Her Own at the Top magazine reviews

The average rating for Room of Her Own at the Top: Women Prime Ministers and Presidents based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-05-02 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars James Featherston
Theodore Roosevelt needs no introduction. However, much of his writings do. This collection of essays, including the Strenuous Life, is a good starting point for getting to know the Roosevelt that stated: "speak softly and carry a big stick". His essays here do not speak so softly, but they do carry a big stick. I wish that I could say that I enjoyed them, but the essays primarily extol military might, "clean and healthy lives", righteousness and duty to country. While these concepts are not in themselves bad, Roosevelt's insistence upon making them the bulwark of all that is good and non-questionable, without defining concisely what they are antiquates the writings. That being said, there are memorable moments in the collection; the most famous being in the Strenuous Life concerning the "doctrine of ignoble ease". This essay is the backbone of the collection, but there are moments in some of that latter essays as well. In "Civic Helpfulness", Roosevelt writes: "…the prime worth of a creed is to be gaged by the standard of conduct it exacts among its followers." Always the practical man, in "Promise and Performance" Roosevelt writes, "A man is worthless unless he has in him a lofty devotion to an ideal, and his worthless also unless he strives to realize this ideal by practical methods." Other essays include the place of sports and the importance of military leaders (his three top being Washington, Lincoln, and Grant). While there is no doubt that T. Roosevelt was a great man in his own time…he was a great man in his own time, and this collections mirrors that. There is much to be gleaned here, but the nuggets of truth that Roosevelt is so well known for are just that: nuggets. The majority of the writings (and ideas in my opinion) are dated and mirror a man that lived in a time when indoctrination was considered patriotic, and intolerance the norm. The collection is certainly worth the time to read, for no other reason than historical. The writing style is dated, but I think in a good way: it reminds us that people once took the time to learn to write and portray ideas thoroughly and concisely rather than clumsily on a cellphone with one's thumbs even if some of those ideas are a bit pious.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-04-26 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Irene Fallon
Theodore Roosevelt encouraged me to get off my butt and get the dishes in the dishwasher, to start the washing machine, and to start my car to run errands.


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