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The Presidential Book of Lists: From Most to Least, Elected to Rejected, Worst to Cursed-Fascinating Facts About Our Chief Executives [Paperback]

Ian Randal Strock
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 21, 2008
An entertaining and informative compendium of facts and trivia about the U.S. presidents ranges from George Washington to the results of the 2008 presidential election in a volume organized into more than one hundred different categories.
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.


Editorial Reviews

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

The Five Presidents Who Lived Longest

1. Gerald Ford. Born on July 14, 1913, he overtook Ronald Reagan as the oldest President on November 12, 2006, and then died December 26, 2006. He was 93 years, 164 days old.

2. Ronald Reagan. Born on February 6, 1911, he was 93 years, 120 days old when he died on June 5, 2004. In October 2001 he eclipsed John Adams’s record, which had stood since 1826.

3. John Adams. Born on October 30, 1735, more than 40 years before the United States itself was born, our second President was the longest lived for almost two centuries. He took the title from George Washington in 1802, and held it until 2001. He died on July 4, 1826, aged 90 years, 247 days.

4. Herbert Hoover. Born on August 10, 1874, he lived 90 years, 71 days, and died on October 20, 1964, having been retired from the presidency for 31 years.

5. Harry Truman. Born May 8, 1884, he was 88 years, 232 days old when he died on December 26, 1972.

Only four Presidents have held the title of “longest lived”: George Washington (who, as the first President, held most of the titles first), John Adams, Ronald Reagan, and Gerald Ford.

George H.W. Bush won’t be able to knock Truman off this list until January 30, 2013 (he’ll take the title from Ford on November 24, 2017). Jimmy Carter is 111 days younger than GHWBush. George W. Bush will be 88 years, 232 days old on February 23, 2039. Bill Clinton is 41 days younger than his successor, GWBush.



The Five Presidents Who Died Youngest

1. John F. Kennedy. The youngest to be elected was also the youngest to die. He was assassinated in his third year in office, on November 22, 1963, at the age of 46 years, 177 days.

2. James A. Garfield. The second President to be assassinated, he was shot on July 2, 1881, but lingered another two months, before succumbing on September 19 at the age of 49 years, 304 days.

3. James K. Polk. The shortest-?lived President to not die in office, Polk served one term (1845–49) and then died three months after leaving office, on June 15, 1849, aged 53 years, 225 days.

4. Abraham Lincoln. The first to be assassinated, he was 56 years, 64 days old when he died on April 15, 1865, a day after John Wilkes Booth shot him.

5. Chester A. Arthur. He succeeded to the presidency upon Garfield’s death (see above), served out the term, and then died a year and a half after leaving office, on November 18, 1886, aged 57 years, 44 days.

All four living Presidents (Carter, both Bushes, and Clinton) are already ineligible for this list.

Splitting the list into those who died in office and those who died after retiring, we get:

The five Presidents who died the youngest while in office:

1. John F. Kennedy (see above).

2. James A. Garfield (see above).

3. Abraham Lincoln (see above).

4. Warren G. Harding. He died in office on August 2, 1923, aged 57 years, 273 days.

5. William McKinley. Shot September 6, 1901, died Septem-ber 14, aged 58 years, 228 days.

George W. Bush became ineligible for this list on February 19, 2005.

The five Presidents who died the youngest after leaving office:

1. James K. Polk (see above).

2. Chester A. Arthur (see above).

3. Theodore Roosevelt. He died after serving his seven years and then running unsuccessfully against his successor, William H. Taft, in 1912. He died January 6, 1919, aged 60 years, 71 days.

4. Calvin Coolidge. He served the end of Harding’s term and then was elected for a term of his own. He died on January 5, 1933, aged 60 years, 185 days.

5. Ulysses S. Grant. After a hard-?drinking life, he died on July 23, 1885, aged 63 years, 87 days.

Franklin D. Roosevelt does not appear on either of these lists. He died younger than Grant (63 years, 72 days), but he died in office.

Presidents Carter and George H.W. Bush are already ineligible for these lists. Bill Clinton will be 63 years, 87 days old on November 14, 2009. His successor, George W. Bush, will be that old on October 1, 2009.



The Five Presidents Who Died Soonest
After Leaving Office


Some retired presidents are respected, others can live to see bad reputations slowly mollified, but these Presidents had very little time to enjoy their retirements.

1. James Knox Polk. He chose not to run for reelection in 1848, and retired from his one term on March 4, 1849. He died 103 days later, on June 15.

2. Chester A. Arthur. He became President upon Garfield’s death, but lost his bid to be nominated for his own term in 1884, and died one year, 259 days after leaving office, on November 18, 1886.

3. George Washington. The first President was the only President to leave office in the 1700s, and the only President to die in the 1700s. He died on December 14, 1799, two years, 285 days after leaving office.

4. Woodrow Wilson. He suffered a stroke while President, and some rumors say he was so incapacitated by it that his wife was acting President for the final five months of his presidency. Nevertheless, he survived another two years, 335 days after leaving office, dying on February 3, 1924.

5. Calvin Coolidge. He refused to be renominated for another term in 1928, and retired after six years in office. He died on January 5, 1933, three years, 337 days after leaving office.

6. Lyndon B. Johnson. He refused to be renominated for another term in 1968, and retired after five years in office. He died on January 22, 1973, four years, two days after leaving office. He ?doesn’t fit into the top five, but misses the list by a scant 31 days.

In order for George W. Bush to avoid a place on this list, he’ll have to survive until January 22, 2013, at which time he’ll be 66 years old.



The Five Presidents Who Lived Longest
After Leaving Office


1. Herbert Hoover. After serving one term, which saw the beginning of the Great Depression, Hoover lost his bid for reelection in 1932, and after Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s inauguration in 1933, he lived for 31 years, 230 days as a retired President, serving the government in several appointed positions before his death in 1964.

2. Gerald Ford. After succeeding to office following Richard Nixon’s resignation, Ford’s pardoning of Nixon may have guaranteed his loss in the election of 1976. He left office on January 20, 1977, and upon his death on December 26, 2006, had been retired for 29 years, 340 days.

3. Jimmy Carter. The 39th President, also served only one term, losing his bid for reelection. He left office on January 20, 1981, four years after Gerald Ford, and passed John Adams (see next entry) on May 22, 2006. He’ll pass Ford on December 27, 2010, and Hoover on September 7, 2012.

4. John Adams. The second President served only one term, and was the second President to die, but between his retirement on March 4, 1801 (when Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated), and his death on July 4, 1826 (the same day as Jefferson), he was retired for 25 years, 122 days.

5. Martin Van Buren. After losing the election of 1840 to the then-? oldest President, William Henry Harrison, Van Buren was almost nominated for President in 1844, and then ran for President on the Free Soil ticket in 1848. When he died on July 24, 1862, he’d been retired for 21 years, 142 days.

George H.W. Bush will pass Millard Fillmore (sixth on the list at 21 years, four days) on January 24, 2014, and Van Buren on June 11 of the same year (which will be the day before his 90th birthday).

Bill Clinton is precisely eight years behind GHWBush, and will pass Van Buren on June 11, 2022, two months before his 76th birthday.

George W. Bush will be precisely eight years behind Clinton, and will pass Van Buren on June 11, 2030, one month before his 84th birthday.



The Five Tallest Presidents

There have been stories that the taller presidential candidate always wins, or that added height gives one added respect. The former is not necessarily so. In the elections in which the heights of both major candidates were known, the taller candidate won less than 60 percent of the time. But does height lend greatness? Only history can judge.

The tallest Presidents were:

1. Abraham Lincoln 6'4". Did his height bring him greatness, or was it the time in which he lived and the challenges he faced? Lincoln was President during the Civil War, and the first to be assassinated.

2. Lyndon Baines Johnson 6'3". He succeeded to the presidency upon the assassination of John Kennedy, then went on to be elected to his own term in 1964, and chose not to run for reelection in 1968.

3 (tie). Thomas Jefferson 6'2.5". The third President wrote the Declaration of Independence, presided over the Louisiana Purchase, and is known for great achievements in a wide variety of fields.

3 (tie). Bill Clinton 6'2.5". The first Democrat to be reelected since Franklin Roosevelt, Clinton was only the second President to be impeached (following Andrew Johnson). Like Johnson, he was acquitted.

5 (tie). George Washington 6'2". Commander of the Continental Army and later the first President, he would have been known as a terrorist or a rebel had England been able to retain their upstart American colonies.

5 (tie). Chester Alan Arthur 6'2". He succeeded to the presidency when assassinated President James Garfield died in late 1881, but was not nominated for his own term in 1884, and retired in 1885, only to die a year later.

5 (tie). William Howard Taft 6'2". He was Theodore Roose?velt’s handpicked successor, and served one term, 1909–13. He lost his bid for reelection when Roosevelt challenged him in the election of 1912, giving Woodrow Wilson the election. In 1921, President Warren Harding appointed Taft Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the position he’d most ardently des...

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Villard (October 21, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345507363
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345507365
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 0.6 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,030,299 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Ian Randal Strock is an author and editor, and he's frequently confused as to which hat he's wearing. The Presidential Book of Lists is his first book, drawing on his life-long passion for US history, the Presidents, and trivia, but he still thinks of himself as a science fiction author and editor. As an author, most of his stories have been published in Analog Science Fiction and Fact. As an editor and reporter, he edits and publishes SFScope.com (the online trade journal of the speculative fiction fields). He's also available for speaking appearances, talking about the Presidents, writing, or manned commercial space industrialization (yes, he's also one of the founders of the Artemis Project).

In addition to his blog uspresidents.livejournal.com, which is echoed here, his more personal blog is at ianrandalstrock.livejournal.com. He's also on Facebook, and, well, spreading himself thin in the electronic realm.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This book contains 104 lists of trivia about the 43 American presidents from 1789 through March 2008. Each entry contains a paragraph of text about that particular president. Many of these lists compile interesting bits of information, such as "The Five Presidents Who Issued The Most Vetoes" and "The Presidents on U.S. Paper Money". However, much range from the widely known ("The Four Presidents Who Were Assassinated", "The Four Presidents on Mount Rushmore") to the dull and obscure ("Presidents Who Shared Birthdays/Death Days With Vice Presidents"). The genealogical lists grow tiresome with minutia like "Benjamin Harrison and Jimmy Carter are probably sixth cousins, three times removed". Much of the supporting text is repeated between a President's numerous appearances on several different lists. The book culminates in "The Average President": a list of statistical averages for about 40 criteria.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating look at presidential trivia November 10, 2008
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Presidential Book of Lists hearkens back to a time when many publishers released trivia books in the form of factual lists. The book presents information about the United States presidents in a variety of lists, allowing the reader to appreciate the role of the chief executive of the country in a new light. One section of the book is devoted to the "average" president, in which the author lays out those traits that presidents have mostly had in common over the 200+ years of the USA. Trivia buffs and people interested in politics and history will return to this book time and again to learn something new.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars boring, incomplete February 19, 2009
Format:Paperback
I love presidential trivia, learned a few things, but had some major problems with this book.

As one of the other posters mentioned, a lot of the lists are the very obvious ones. In addition to who's on Mt. Rushmore and presidents who were assassinated, I might also cite Buchanan as the only bachelor and presidents on coins.

At the same time, there are also lists that are quite obscure. In addition to the presidents and vice-presidents who died on the same day that was already mentioned, I'd also cite presidents who were the greatest number of years younger (or older) than their predecessor, presidents whose wives outlived them the longest (or vice versa), and presidents who had all their siblings live to see them take office.

The repetition that the other poster mentioned is really quite annoying. You know the "(see above)" citations in the excerpts? Well, they're all spelled out in the book. This was a particular problem in lists, like those above, that were very closely related. And there are quite a number of them - presidents who outlived the greatest number of successors, presidents older than the greatest number of their predecessors, presidents who had no living predecessors, presidents who had the most living predecessors, time periods when the most former and current presidents were alive.

Another related and very annoying thing the author does is to spell out obvious details every time the patricular president is mentioned. For example, instead of just listing the youngest presidents and their ages, for each he'll say something along the lines of "Joe Jones, who was 45 years and 15 days when he succeeded Bob Smith on Jan 20th 1926 and remained in office until Jan. 20, 1930 after he was defeated by Jim Johnson." Just a simple "Joe Jones - 45 years and 15 days" would have been more than enough. (Of course, the book might have been 50 pages in that case.)

Now, if the author wanted to add a little tidbit or two to make things interesting, that would've been great. For example, under occupations, the author lists the lawyers, politicians, businessmen, etc., but fails to mention interesting things like Truman being a haberdasher or Ford being a model and park ranger.

In fact, that seemed to be a real drawback of the book. If the data wasn't easily quantifiable - height, age, time in office - the author simply wasn't that interested. Some of the very interesting possibilities this left out include causes of death, medical conditions, hair color, baldness, hobbies, sports, heritage, left-handedness, affairs, illegitimate children, musical instruments, firsts (to be photographed, use a phone, ride in a car, etc.), etc., etc.

I did like the average president and also the debunking of the David Atchison story, but overall the book was boring and rather incomplete.
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