David Pietrusza
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About David Pietrusza
Praised as one "of the best historians in the United States," "one of the great political historians of all time," and "the undisputed champion of chronicling American Presidential campaigns." David Pietrusza has produced a number of critically-acclaimed works concerning 20th century American history. Critics have compared his work to that of Eric Larson, H. L. Mencken, Theodore H. White, Edmund Morris, H. R. Brands, and Doris Kearns Goodwin.
Amazon rated his "TR's Last War: Theodore Roosevelt, the Great War, and a Journey of Triumph and Tragedy" as the "#1 New Release" in World War 1 Biographies. It also captured the Independent Publisher Book Awards Silver Medal for US History and achieved Finalist status for the Theodore Roosevelt Book Prize.
His "1932: The Rise of Hitler and FDR: Two Tales of Politics, Betrayal, and Unlikely Destiny" (starred review-Kirkus) won the Independent Publisher Book Awards Silver Medal for World History and was nominated for the American Library Association (ALA)'s Notable Books Council's 2015 Notable Books List.
His "1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year that Transformed America," a study of the dramatic 1948 presidential campaign, is a selection of the History Book Club, the Book-of-the-Month Club, and the Literary Guild. The Wall Street Journal praised "1948" as among the "Five Best" books on "Campaigns and Candidates."
ForeWord Magazine designated his book "1960: LBJ vs JFK vs Nixon: The Epic Campaign that Forged Three Presidencies" as among the best political biographies. Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Caro has termed "1960" "terrific."
Pietrusza's "1920: The Year of the Six Presidents" received a Kirkus starred review, was honored as a Kirkus "Best Books of 2007" title, and was named an alternate selection of the History Book Club. Historian Richard Norton Smith has listed "1920: The Year of the Six Presidents" as being among the best studies of presidential campaigns. The Wall Street Journal rated "1920" as among the Five Best Books on Political Campaigns ("broad, fluid brush strokes . . . a brisk narrative")
Pietrusza's biography of Arnold Rothstein entitled "Rothstein: The Life, Times & Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the 1919 World Series" was a finalist for the 2003 Edgar Award. Rothstein's audio version won an AUDIOFILE Earphones Award.
Pietrusza has edited three volumes on the career and works of Calvin Coolidge: "Silent Cal's Almanack: The Homespun Wit & Wisdom of Vermont's Calvin Coolidge," "Calvin Coolidge: A Documentary Biography," and "Coolidge on the Founders: Calvin Coolidge on the American Revolution & the Founding Fathers." Says Amity Shlaes: "an authority on the 1920s and [Calvin] Coolidge . . . David Pietrusza has brought Coolidge back to life with his volumes about the president . . ."
Pietrusza's "Judge and Jury, his biography of baseball's first commissioner, Kenesaw Mountain Landis," received the 1998 CASEY Award and was also a Finalist for the 1998 Seymour Medal and nominated for the NASSH Book Award.
Pietrusza collaborated with baseball legend Ted Williams on an autobiography called "Ted Williams: My Life in Pictures."
Pietrusza holds both bachelor's and master's degrees in history from the University at Albany. He has assisted in teaching seminars at the University of Chicago Institute of Politics (David Axelrod, director) and at the William F. Buckley, Jr. Program at Yale and has served as a guest lecturer at Fordgham University, The King's College (New York City), and Southeast Missouri State University. He has spoken at the John F. Kennedy, Harry S. Truman, and Franklin D. Roosevelt presidential libraries and museums, as well as at various universities, libraries, festivals, and museums (including the Chicago History Museum, the Sixth Floor Museum, the Flagler Museum, and the National Automobile Museum). He has keynoted the annual birthday ceremonies at the graves of presidents Calvin Coolidge and Chester Alan Arthur and spoken at Wilton, New York's Grant Cottage, scene of the death of President Ulysses S. Grant.
His books have been utilized as texts by such colleges as George Washington University, the City University of New York, the University at Buffalo, Baylor University, Bellevue College, the University of Illinois, the University of San Francisco, and Portland State College. "1920" has been part of the syllabus for the course "Congress, The Presidency & 21st Century Media" offered by C-SPAN, The Cable Center, and the University of Denver. His talk on "Silent Cal's Almanack" is included in the curriculum for the C-SPAN Classroom initiative.
Pietrusza served as president (1993-97) of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR), and as editor-in-chief of the publishing company Total Sports.
He has been interviewed on NPR, MSNBC, C-SPAN (including "The Contenders" and "First Ladies: Influence & Image"), C-SPAN Book TV (including "In Depth"), C-SPAN American History TV, ESPN, the Fox News Channel, the History Channel ("The Ultimate Guide to the Presidents"), the American Heroes Channel ("Mafia's Greatest Hits"), the John Batchelor Show, the Hugh Hewitt Show, EBRU-TV, GBTV, the Voice of America, Newsmax TV, "Secrets of New York," the Fox Sports Channel ("Baseball's Golden Age"), and Compound Media. He has produced and wrote the PBS-affiliate documentary, "Local Heroes." He has served as a regular panelist for FoxNews.com Live.
Pietrusza has appeared on numerous podcasts, including the "Matt Lewis Show Podcast," the United States World War I Centennial Commission weekly podcast, "The History Author Show," "Coffee & Markets," Jonah Goldberg's "The Remnant" podcast; Roifield Brown's London-based "10 American Presidents" (the Franklin Roosevelt and Theodore Roosevelt episodes), "10 American Elections" (the 1964 and 1948 episodes), and "Friday 15" series; Salena Zito's presidential series discussing Calvin Coolidge, Harry S Truman, and Lyndon B. Johnson; Bill Scher's "New Books in Politics" podcast for the New Books Network; the Halli Casser-Jayne Show, the Gotham Variety Podcast, and Max Sklar's "The Local Maximum," as well as discussing Arnold Rothstein on Erik Rivenes' "More Notorious: A True Crime History Podcast," Noah Brace's "Mobcast," and Harry Sultan's "The Wheels Keep Spinning."
An internationally recognized expert on American presidential elections, he has been interviewed by Le Figaro, Le Monde, Radio-France, Radio-France International, Agence France Presse, Greece's To Vima, and Denmark's Morgenavisen Jyllands-Posten.
Pietrusza holds both bachelor's and master's degrees in history from the University at Albany and has served on the City Council in Amsterdam, New York. He has served as public information officer for both the NYS Governor's Office of Regulatory Reform and the NYS Office of the Medicaid Inspector General.
Pietrusza is the Recipient of the 2011 Excellence in Arts & Letters Award of the Alumni Association of the University at Albany and a member of the initial induction class of the Greater Amsterdam (NY) School District Hall of Fame.
Learn more at www.davidpietrusza.com
Amazon rated his "TR's Last War: Theodore Roosevelt, the Great War, and a Journey of Triumph and Tragedy" as the "#1 New Release" in World War 1 Biographies. It also captured the Independent Publisher Book Awards Silver Medal for US History and achieved Finalist status for the Theodore Roosevelt Book Prize.
His "1932: The Rise of Hitler and FDR: Two Tales of Politics, Betrayal, and Unlikely Destiny" (starred review-Kirkus) won the Independent Publisher Book Awards Silver Medal for World History and was nominated for the American Library Association (ALA)'s Notable Books Council's 2015 Notable Books List.
His "1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year that Transformed America," a study of the dramatic 1948 presidential campaign, is a selection of the History Book Club, the Book-of-the-Month Club, and the Literary Guild. The Wall Street Journal praised "1948" as among the "Five Best" books on "Campaigns and Candidates."
ForeWord Magazine designated his book "1960: LBJ vs JFK vs Nixon: The Epic Campaign that Forged Three Presidencies" as among the best political biographies. Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Caro has termed "1960" "terrific."
Pietrusza's "1920: The Year of the Six Presidents" received a Kirkus starred review, was honored as a Kirkus "Best Books of 2007" title, and was named an alternate selection of the History Book Club. Historian Richard Norton Smith has listed "1920: The Year of the Six Presidents" as being among the best studies of presidential campaigns. The Wall Street Journal rated "1920" as among the Five Best Books on Political Campaigns ("broad, fluid brush strokes . . . a brisk narrative")
Pietrusza's biography of Arnold Rothstein entitled "Rothstein: The Life, Times & Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the 1919 World Series" was a finalist for the 2003 Edgar Award. Rothstein's audio version won an AUDIOFILE Earphones Award.
Pietrusza has edited three volumes on the career and works of Calvin Coolidge: "Silent Cal's Almanack: The Homespun Wit & Wisdom of Vermont's Calvin Coolidge," "Calvin Coolidge: A Documentary Biography," and "Coolidge on the Founders: Calvin Coolidge on the American Revolution & the Founding Fathers." Says Amity Shlaes: "an authority on the 1920s and [Calvin] Coolidge . . . David Pietrusza has brought Coolidge back to life with his volumes about the president . . ."
Pietrusza's "Judge and Jury, his biography of baseball's first commissioner, Kenesaw Mountain Landis," received the 1998 CASEY Award and was also a Finalist for the 1998 Seymour Medal and nominated for the NASSH Book Award.
Pietrusza collaborated with baseball legend Ted Williams on an autobiography called "Ted Williams: My Life in Pictures."
Pietrusza holds both bachelor's and master's degrees in history from the University at Albany. He has assisted in teaching seminars at the University of Chicago Institute of Politics (David Axelrod, director) and at the William F. Buckley, Jr. Program at Yale and has served as a guest lecturer at Fordgham University, The King's College (New York City), and Southeast Missouri State University. He has spoken at the John F. Kennedy, Harry S. Truman, and Franklin D. Roosevelt presidential libraries and museums, as well as at various universities, libraries, festivals, and museums (including the Chicago History Museum, the Sixth Floor Museum, the Flagler Museum, and the National Automobile Museum). He has keynoted the annual birthday ceremonies at the graves of presidents Calvin Coolidge and Chester Alan Arthur and spoken at Wilton, New York's Grant Cottage, scene of the death of President Ulysses S. Grant.
His books have been utilized as texts by such colleges as George Washington University, the City University of New York, the University at Buffalo, Baylor University, Bellevue College, the University of Illinois, the University of San Francisco, and Portland State College. "1920" has been part of the syllabus for the course "Congress, The Presidency & 21st Century Media" offered by C-SPAN, The Cable Center, and the University of Denver. His talk on "Silent Cal's Almanack" is included in the curriculum for the C-SPAN Classroom initiative.
Pietrusza served as president (1993-97) of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR), and as editor-in-chief of the publishing company Total Sports.
He has been interviewed on NPR, MSNBC, C-SPAN (including "The Contenders" and "First Ladies: Influence & Image"), C-SPAN Book TV (including "In Depth"), C-SPAN American History TV, ESPN, the Fox News Channel, the History Channel ("The Ultimate Guide to the Presidents"), the American Heroes Channel ("Mafia's Greatest Hits"), the John Batchelor Show, the Hugh Hewitt Show, EBRU-TV, GBTV, the Voice of America, Newsmax TV, "Secrets of New York," the Fox Sports Channel ("Baseball's Golden Age"), and Compound Media. He has produced and wrote the PBS-affiliate documentary, "Local Heroes." He has served as a regular panelist for FoxNews.com Live.
Pietrusza has appeared on numerous podcasts, including the "Matt Lewis Show Podcast," the United States World War I Centennial Commission weekly podcast, "The History Author Show," "Coffee & Markets," Jonah Goldberg's "The Remnant" podcast; Roifield Brown's London-based "10 American Presidents" (the Franklin Roosevelt and Theodore Roosevelt episodes), "10 American Elections" (the 1964 and 1948 episodes), and "Friday 15" series; Salena Zito's presidential series discussing Calvin Coolidge, Harry S Truman, and Lyndon B. Johnson; Bill Scher's "New Books in Politics" podcast for the New Books Network; the Halli Casser-Jayne Show, the Gotham Variety Podcast, and Max Sklar's "The Local Maximum," as well as discussing Arnold Rothstein on Erik Rivenes' "More Notorious: A True Crime History Podcast," Noah Brace's "Mobcast," and Harry Sultan's "The Wheels Keep Spinning."
An internationally recognized expert on American presidential elections, he has been interviewed by Le Figaro, Le Monde, Radio-France, Radio-France International, Agence France Presse, Greece's To Vima, and Denmark's Morgenavisen Jyllands-Posten.
Pietrusza holds both bachelor's and master's degrees in history from the University at Albany and has served on the City Council in Amsterdam, New York. He has served as public information officer for both the NYS Governor's Office of Regulatory Reform and the NYS Office of the Medicaid Inspector General.
Pietrusza is the Recipient of the 2011 Excellence in Arts & Letters Award of the Alumni Association of the University at Albany and a member of the initial induction class of the Greater Amsterdam (NY) School District Hall of Fame.
Learn more at www.davidpietrusza.com
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Blog post9pm-1am: 9pm: Gregory Copley, @jmhumire, @MariaFdaCabal. 10pm: @lizpeek, @josephsternberg. 11pm: @hooverwhalen, @wjmcgurn, @johntamny. 12am: "Rothstein" By, @DPietrusza #Batchelorshow #TalkRadio @MLB6 months ago Read more
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Blog postHear it! @DPietrusza on the milk 'n' cookies-guzzling gangster who bankrolled Major League Baseball's day of infamy, fixing the #WorldSeries in 1919. But the life of a gangster rarely ends peacefully in bed. @BasicBooks historyauthor.com/2019/10/david-… pic.twitter.com/nr3LVmfvGz6 months ago Read more
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Blog postHear it! David Pietrusza @DPietrusza and I met up at the @FDRLibrary to discuss the 1920 election and its parallels to 2020. historyauthor.com/2020/02/david-… pic.twitter.com/zkGnSyktP76 months ago Read more
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Blog post"Ich bin ein haircut" (that was the highlight of my day today, and by recent standards it was a pretty good highlight).6 months ago Read more
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Blog postFor my money, no one can tell the story of an election like @DPietrusza #BookReview #NewPost #elections iowaguy2020.blogspot.com/2020/06/book-r…6 months ago Read more
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Blog postAnd I thought my mask was uncomfortable. twitter.com/triviapotus/st…6 months ago Read more
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Blog postI don't think this is going to last: #audiobooks version of "1960: #LBJ vs. #JFK vs. Nixon--The Epic Campaign That Forged Three Presidencies" now just $1.99! Audiobooks haven't been this cheap since McKinley! amazon.com/1960-LBJ-JFK-N… pic.twitter.com/bOvXU2828V6 months ago Read more
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Blog post#Audiobook version of "TR's Last War: Theodore Roosevelt, the Great War, and a Journey of Triumph and Tragedy" now just $7.49! #History amazon.com/TRs-Last-War-D… pic.twitter.com/XI8qgcJj7X6 months ago Read more
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Blog postNews on the Rocks With Patty Steele: Vince Giordano omny.fm/shows/wins-new…6 months ago Read more
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Blog postBefore there was any #NewNormal, we just had plain "normalcy." Learn about it and the 1920 #election with myself, @AmityShlaes and the @CoolidgeClub youtube.com/watch?v=MxVZW4… pic.twitter.com/BotYqk2t5t6 months ago Read more
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Blog postThe best presidential campaign book ever written. Watch the video. Read the book. twitter.com/DPietrusza/sta…6 months ago Read more
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Blog postBefore there was any #NewNormal, we just had plain "normalcy." Learn about it and the 1920 #election with myself, @AmityShlaes and the @CoolidgeClub youtube.com/watch?v=MxVZW4… pic.twitter.com/BotYqk2t5t6 months ago Read more
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Blog postListening to Ralph Vaughn Williams' "Symphony No. 3," sometimes known as the "Third Symphony." @SIRIUSXM6 months ago Read more
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Blog postDon't know. There certainly have been some awkward rides down Pennsylvania Avenue though--i.e., Wilson-Harding (1921), Hoover-FDR (1933), for example.6 months ago Read more
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Blog postI just loves the way he humanizes these folks. And connects them with others. And the humor. It is really great writing.6 months ago Read more
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Blog post@DPietrusza I am LOVING 1960. It is exactly the content that I want. 1948 next. I think you should write one about 1896, 1980, and 1992 next!6 months ago Read more
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Blog post"1920: The Year of Six Presidents" #Zoomcast with the @CoolidgeClub's @AmityShlaes. #history #author #books youtu.be/MxVZW4-5DtU via @YouTube pic.twitter.com/KEYbyo4prL6 months ago Read more
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Blog postHear it! The Jazz Age picks a president! David Pietrusza @DPietrusza joins us at the @FDRLibrary to discuss the 1920 election and its parallels to 2020. Is there a Calvin Coolidge, a convention VP choice with a long resume that ends up thrust into the job? historyauthor.com/2020/02/david-… pic.twitter.com/030oDZg0NF6 months ago Read more
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Books By David Pietrusza
$10.44
“1960 aims to take us deeper into the campaign than Theodore White’s famous The Making of the President, 1960. And it does.”—Chicago Sun-Times
This is award-winning historian David Pietrusza's hard-edged account of the 1960 presidential campaign, the election that ultimately gave America “Camelot” and its tragic aftermath. It is the story of the bare-knuckle politics of the primaries; the party conventions' backroom dealings; the unprecedented television debates; the hot-button issues of race, religion, and foreign policy—and, at the center of it all, three future presidents: Lyndon Johnson, John F. Kennedy, and Richard Nixon.
“Terrific.” —Robert A. Caro, winner of two Pulitzer Prizes and the National Book Award
“A stirring, hard-edged political saga… An outstanding reexamination.”—Booklist
"1960 provides new insights into that year's hard-fought, pivotal election, but, more than that, 1960 is great storytelling—a fascinating, can’t-put-it-down account of how American politics really works.”—former United States Attorney General Richard Thornburgh
“Essential for understanding the political forces that in many ways shaped the world we live in today.” —David Mark, author of Going Dirty: The Art of Negative Campaigning
This is award-winning historian David Pietrusza's hard-edged account of the 1960 presidential campaign, the election that ultimately gave America “Camelot” and its tragic aftermath. It is the story of the bare-knuckle politics of the primaries; the party conventions' backroom dealings; the unprecedented television debates; the hot-button issues of race, religion, and foreign policy—and, at the center of it all, three future presidents: Lyndon Johnson, John F. Kennedy, and Richard Nixon.
“Terrific.” —Robert A. Caro, winner of two Pulitzer Prizes and the National Book Award
“A stirring, hard-edged political saga… An outstanding reexamination.”—Booklist
"1960 provides new insights into that year's hard-fought, pivotal election, but, more than that, 1960 is great storytelling—a fascinating, can’t-put-it-down account of how American politics really works.”—former United States Attorney General Richard Thornburgh
“Essential for understanding the political forces that in many ways shaped the world we live in today.” —David Mark, author of Going Dirty: The Art of Negative Campaigning
1920: The Year of the Six Presidents
Apr 21, 2009
$2.99
The presidential election of 1920 was among history's most dramatic. Six once-and-future presidents-Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, and Teddy and Franklin Roosevelt-jockeyed for the White House. With voters choosing between Wilson's League of Nations and Harding's front-porch isolationism, the 1920 election shaped modern America. Women won the vote. Republicans outspent Democrats by 4 to 1, as voters witnessed the first extensive newsreel coverage, modern campaign advertising, and results broadcast on radio. America had become an urban nation: Automobiles, mass production, chain stores, and easy credit transformed the economy. 1920 paints a vivid portrait of America, beset by the Red Scare, jailed dissidents, Prohibition, smoke-filled rooms, bomb-throwing terrorists, and the Klan, gingerly crossing modernity's threshold.
Too Long Ago: A Childhood Memory. A Vanished World.
Nov 10, 2020
$4.99
Amazon Best Seller in "New Releases in Ethnic & National Biographies"
Amazon Best Seller in "New Releases in Memoirs"
"poignant and fascinating"--The Schenectady Gazette
A sardonic expedition into a small-town ethnic childhood and post-World War II America—and how to survive Rust Belt hard times.
At last . . . a memoir finally worthy of comparison to the uproariously funny fiction of the great Jean Shepherd, author and narrator of the beloved A Christmas Story.
Only . . . it’s all true. Sometimes . . . sadly true.
Award-winning presidential historian and baseball scholar David Pietrusza’s witty and wise tale of growing up in the 1950s and 60s, Too Long Ago is no Leave It to Beaver or Father Knows Best episode. It’s a unique glimpse into an unjustly ignored and forgotten immigrant experience—Eastern European and devoutly pre-Vatican II Catholic. A tale of a tight-knit Polish community, transplanted from tiny, impoverished Hapsburg-ruled villages to a hardscrabble, hardworking, hard-drinking Upstate New York mill town. It’s how the first rust corroded the Rust Belt, sidetracking dreams but not hope.
It’s a lively saga of secrets and hard times, of insanity, of manslaughter and murder, of war and postwar, Depression and Recession, racetracks and religions, books and bar rooms, unforgettable personalities and vastly unpronounceable names, of characters and character, of popular culture (sometimes surprisingly high by today’s standards), of homelessness, of immigration—first to America and then from Rust Belt to Sun Belt—of vices and virtues, and how a sickly, bookwormish boy who loved history and the presidents finally discovered a national pastime and made it his own.
Meet Too Long Ago’s mesmerizing cast of characters: Depression-ravaged Felix and Agnes Marek, Corporal Danny Pietrusza and his wartime adventures, Uncle Tony Lenczewski and his raided saloon, brutal serial-killer Lemuel Smith, the high-kicking weather-prophet “Cousin George” Casabonne, carpet heiress and OSS operative Gertie Sanford, caught behind-enemy-lines Mary Zaklukiewicz, and the homeless (but not hopeless) Uncle Leo Zack.
Alternately sharp-edged and warm-hearted—sometimes shocking and always surprising—Too Long Ago is a poignant tour-de-force, a no-stopping-for-breath, coming-of-age narrative, akin to cross-breeding Jean Shepherd’s boisterous A Christmas Story with Pulitzer Prize-winner Richard Russo’s gritty semi-autobiographical novel Mohawk (set mere miles from Too Long Ago) and presenting the genre-bending result in the mesmerizing form of a decidedly non-WASPY rendition of an epic Spalding Gray monolog.
Amazon Best Seller in "New Releases in Memoirs"
"poignant and fascinating"--The Schenectady Gazette
A sardonic expedition into a small-town ethnic childhood and post-World War II America—and how to survive Rust Belt hard times.
At last . . . a memoir finally worthy of comparison to the uproariously funny fiction of the great Jean Shepherd, author and narrator of the beloved A Christmas Story.
Only . . . it’s all true. Sometimes . . . sadly true.
Award-winning presidential historian and baseball scholar David Pietrusza’s witty and wise tale of growing up in the 1950s and 60s, Too Long Ago is no Leave It to Beaver or Father Knows Best episode. It’s a unique glimpse into an unjustly ignored and forgotten immigrant experience—Eastern European and devoutly pre-Vatican II Catholic. A tale of a tight-knit Polish community, transplanted from tiny, impoverished Hapsburg-ruled villages to a hardscrabble, hardworking, hard-drinking Upstate New York mill town. It’s how the first rust corroded the Rust Belt, sidetracking dreams but not hope.
It’s a lively saga of secrets and hard times, of insanity, of manslaughter and murder, of war and postwar, Depression and Recession, racetracks and religions, books and bar rooms, unforgettable personalities and vastly unpronounceable names, of characters and character, of popular culture (sometimes surprisingly high by today’s standards), of homelessness, of immigration—first to America and then from Rust Belt to Sun Belt—of vices and virtues, and how a sickly, bookwormish boy who loved history and the presidents finally discovered a national pastime and made it his own.
Meet Too Long Ago’s mesmerizing cast of characters: Depression-ravaged Felix and Agnes Marek, Corporal Danny Pietrusza and his wartime adventures, Uncle Tony Lenczewski and his raided saloon, brutal serial-killer Lemuel Smith, the high-kicking weather-prophet “Cousin George” Casabonne, carpet heiress and OSS operative Gertie Sanford, caught behind-enemy-lines Mary Zaklukiewicz, and the homeless (but not hopeless) Uncle Leo Zack.
Alternately sharp-edged and warm-hearted—sometimes shocking and always surprising—Too Long Ago is a poignant tour-de-force, a no-stopping-for-breath, coming-of-age narrative, akin to cross-breeding Jean Shepherd’s boisterous A Christmas Story with Pulitzer Prize-winner Richard Russo’s gritty semi-autobiographical novel Mohawk (set mere miles from Too Long Ago) and presenting the genre-bending result in the mesmerizing form of a decidedly non-WASPY rendition of an epic Spalding Gray monolog.
Other Formats:
Paperback
$15.19
The wild, combative inside story of the most stunning upset in the history of presidential elections: Harry Truman's 1948 victory over Tom Dewey.
"Outstanding. . . . by far the best yet about the fateful [1948] election." --Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Coherent, compelling. . . . A skillful, authoritative investigation." --Kirkus Reviews
Award-winning historian David Pietrusza unpacks the most ingloriously iconic headline in the history of presidential elections--DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN--to reveal the 1948 campaign's backstage events and recount the down-to-the-wire brawl fought against the background of an erupting Cold War, the Berlin Airlift, the birth of Israel, and a post-war America facing exploding storms over civil rights and domestic communism.
"A terrific book. . . . a must-read." --Ron Faucheux, former editor-in-chief, Campaigns & Elections magazine
"David Pietrusza brilliantly portrays President Harry Truman's successful efforts to stave off the challenge of New York Gov. Tom Dewey, who was making a repeat bid as the Republican nominee." --David Mark, journalist, political analyst, and author of Going Dirty: The Art of Negative Campaigning
"Sweeping . . . compelling." --Library Journal "gripping detail . . . compelling" --The New York Journal of Books
"Outstanding. . . . by far the best yet about the fateful [1948] election." --Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Coherent, compelling. . . . A skillful, authoritative investigation." --Kirkus Reviews
Award-winning historian David Pietrusza unpacks the most ingloriously iconic headline in the history of presidential elections--DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN--to reveal the 1948 campaign's backstage events and recount the down-to-the-wire brawl fought against the background of an erupting Cold War, the Berlin Airlift, the birth of Israel, and a post-war America facing exploding storms over civil rights and domestic communism.
"A terrific book. . . . a must-read." --Ron Faucheux, former editor-in-chief, Campaigns & Elections magazine
"David Pietrusza brilliantly portrays President Harry Truman's successful efforts to stave off the challenge of New York Gov. Tom Dewey, who was making a repeat bid as the Republican nominee." --David Mark, journalist, political analyst, and author of Going Dirty: The Art of Negative Campaigning
"Sweeping . . . compelling." --Library Journal "gripping detail . . . compelling" --The New York Journal of Books
Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the 1919 World Series
Sep 13, 2011
$12.99
History remembers Arnold Rothstein as the man who fixed the 1919 World Series, an underworld genius. The real-life model for The Great Gatsby's Meyer Wolfsheim and Nathan Detroit from Guys and Dolls, Rothstein was much moreand lessthan a fixer of baseball games. He was everything that made 1920s Manhattan roar. Featuring Jazz Age Broadway with its thugs, speakeasies, showgirls, political movers and shakers, and stars of the Golden Age of Sports, this is a biography of the man who dominated an age. Arnold Rothstein was a loan shark, pool shark, bookmaker, thief, fence of stolen property, political fixer, Wall Street swindler, labor racketeer, rumrunner, and mastermind of the modern drug trade. Among his monikers were "The Big Bankroll," "The Brain," and "The Man Uptown." This vivid account of Rothstein's life is also the story of con artists, crooked cops, politicians, gang lords, newsmen, speakeasy owners, gamblers and the like. Finally unraveling the mystery of Rothstein's November 1928 murder in a Times Square hotel room, David Pietrusza has cemented The Big Bankroll's place among the most influential and fascinating legendary American criminals. 16 pages of black-and-white photographs are featured.
$4.99
WINNER OF THE CASEY AWARD
Finalist, Seymour Medal
Nominee NASSH Book Award
"Belongs on most Sports bookshelves."
—Library Journal
"well-regarded"
—Washington Post
"Finally, an objective biography of Baseball's first Commissioner. Beautifully done."
—Jerome Holtzman
"Judge and Jury is first rate."
—Fay Vincent
"Baseball fans should be grateful for this comprehensive biography of one of the game's most towering and dominating figures."
—Attorney General Richard Thornburgh
"The most comprehensive biography yet of "the man who save baseball" from the stain of the 1919 Black Sox scandal."
—USA Today Baseball Weekly
"Handled readably and with plenty of documenting research . . . every baseball history library should make room for 'Judge and Jury.'"
—Total Baseball Daily
"David Pietrusza has gone beyond the one dimensional public image of Kenesaw M. Landis that too many people today accept as graven truth . . . In this meticulously researched book, Pietrusza with admirable objectivity depicts both the faults and virtues of one of the most important and colorful figures of the 20th century."
—Robert Creamer
"[Judge and Jury] is outstanding. I have learned more about the history of baseball, true history, than from anything I have ever read or heard about. [It's] research and documentation clarifies so many of the personalities and events that took place before 'my time' in the game. Jacques Barzun's quote: 'Whoever would know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball' should be supplanted by [this] biography of Landis."
—Ralph Kiner
"The truth that emerges from this exhaustive and engaging biography of Judge Landis has no problem matching the outsized legend stride for stride."
—Jeff Silverman, amazon.com
"Excellent"
—Stefan Szymanski & Andrew Zimbalist
Since his death in 1944, history has transformed Kenesaw Mountain Landis into a one-dimensional figure: the stem, scowling ruler of baseball who rescued the sport from the depths of the Black Sox scandal—banishing wrongdoers, scowling at owners, helping to block racial integration. JUDGE AND JURY: The Life and Times of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis strips away the myths and facile explanations to reveal the real Landis—with all the subtleties and contradictions that made him not only czar of baseball, but also the most I famous, popular, and controversial federal judge in America.
Landis' historic $29 million fine on John D. Rockefeller's grasping Standard Oil trust was but the most sensational decision of a long and fiery career on the bench. Through his courtroom trooped such fascinating figures as "Big Bill" Haywood and his radical IWW, bootleggers, gamblers, and con men, religious cultists, and the arsenic-dispensing murderer Herman Billick. The Judge could be harsh-sentencing anti-war dissenters to the maximum penalties—or he could be unpredictably forgiving. Lenience to the downtrodden nearly led to his impeachment.
As the iron-fisted first commissioner of baseball from 1920 to 1944, Landis did whatever he deemed necessary to secure the best interests of baseball. His measures were harsh and often inconsistent to observers, but one of his least popular decisions—the banishment of third baseman Buck Weaver—may have been his most significant move in cleaning up and preserving the game.
Finalist, Seymour Medal
Nominee NASSH Book Award
"Belongs on most Sports bookshelves."
—Library Journal
"well-regarded"
—Washington Post
"Finally, an objective biography of Baseball's first Commissioner. Beautifully done."
—Jerome Holtzman
"Judge and Jury is first rate."
—Fay Vincent
"Baseball fans should be grateful for this comprehensive biography of one of the game's most towering and dominating figures."
—Attorney General Richard Thornburgh
"The most comprehensive biography yet of "the man who save baseball" from the stain of the 1919 Black Sox scandal."
—USA Today Baseball Weekly
"Handled readably and with plenty of documenting research . . . every baseball history library should make room for 'Judge and Jury.'"
—Total Baseball Daily
"David Pietrusza has gone beyond the one dimensional public image of Kenesaw M. Landis that too many people today accept as graven truth . . . In this meticulously researched book, Pietrusza with admirable objectivity depicts both the faults and virtues of one of the most important and colorful figures of the 20th century."
—Robert Creamer
"[Judge and Jury] is outstanding. I have learned more about the history of baseball, true history, than from anything I have ever read or heard about. [It's] research and documentation clarifies so many of the personalities and events that took place before 'my time' in the game. Jacques Barzun's quote: 'Whoever would know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball' should be supplanted by [this] biography of Landis."
—Ralph Kiner
"The truth that emerges from this exhaustive and engaging biography of Judge Landis has no problem matching the outsized legend stride for stride."
—Jeff Silverman, amazon.com
"Excellent"
—Stefan Szymanski & Andrew Zimbalist
Since his death in 1944, history has transformed Kenesaw Mountain Landis into a one-dimensional figure: the stem, scowling ruler of baseball who rescued the sport from the depths of the Black Sox scandal—banishing wrongdoers, scowling at owners, helping to block racial integration. JUDGE AND JURY: The Life and Times of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis strips away the myths and facile explanations to reveal the real Landis—with all the subtleties and contradictions that made him not only czar of baseball, but also the most I famous, popular, and controversial federal judge in America.
Landis' historic $29 million fine on John D. Rockefeller's grasping Standard Oil trust was but the most sensational decision of a long and fiery career on the bench. Through his courtroom trooped such fascinating figures as "Big Bill" Haywood and his radical IWW, bootleggers, gamblers, and con men, religious cultists, and the arsenic-dispensing murderer Herman Billick. The Judge could be harsh-sentencing anti-war dissenters to the maximum penalties—or he could be unpredictably forgiving. Lenience to the downtrodden nearly led to his impeachment.
As the iron-fisted first commissioner of baseball from 1920 to 1944, Landis did whatever he deemed necessary to secure the best interests of baseball. His measures were harsh and often inconsistent to observers, but one of his least popular decisions—the banishment of third baseman Buck Weaver—may have been his most significant move in cleaning up and preserving the game.
Other Formats:
Hardcover
$3.99
A treasury of the wit and wisdom of Calvin Coolidge, America's surprisingly eloquent 30th President.
Silent Cal's Almanack includes:
* The ultimate distillation of Calvin Coolidge political wisdom.
* A selection of Silent Cal's key speeches.
* A thought-provoking original biographical essay.
* A fascinating and unique 50-page portfolio of Coolidge photos, editorial cartoons and campaign memorabilia.
* A Coolidge timeline.
* A Coolidge bibliography.
"He wrote simply, innocently, artlessly," H. L. Mencken once noted regarding Coolidge's prose, "He forgot all the literary affectations and set down his ideas exactly as they came into his head. The result was a bald, but strangely appealing piece of writing-a composition of almost Lincolnian austerity and beauty. The true Vermonter was in every line of it."
Supreme Court Justice David Souter recently wrote of Calvin Coolidge: "The simple beauty of his English prose exceeds anything I could say in praise of it."
About the author:
David Pietrusza, a contributing editor of The New York Sun, is the award-winning author of:
* 1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year that Changed America Forever
* 1920: The Year of the Six Presidents (included among Kirkus Reviews Books of the Year 2007; a Selection of the History Book Club)
* 1960--LBJ vs. JFK vs. Nixon: The Epic Campaign That Forged Three Presidencies (Library Journal [starred review]: "raises the bar." Booklist: "an outstanding re-examination." Kirkus: "colorful . . . lively")
* Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius who Fixed the 1919 World Series (an Edgar Award Finalist; its audio version captured the AUDIOFILE Earphones Award)
* Judge and Jury: The Life and Times of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis (a CASEY Award Winner; Seymour Medal Finalist; and NASSH Award Nominee).
Pietrusza's powerful historical story-telling has been compared to that of Doris Kearns Goodwin, Theodore S. White, and Gene Fowler.
An expert on the 1920s, Pietrusza is a member of the National Advisory Board of the Calvin Coolidge Memorial Foundation and has served on the Board of the Directors of the foundation.
He is also the author of The Roaring Twenties, an examination of the era for younger readers.
A respected commentator, Pietrusza has appeared on C-SPAN BookTV, C-SPAN American History TV, The History Channel, NPR, the Fox News Network, ESPN, WCBS-TV, and the Fox Sports Channel.
C-SPAN has selected Mr. Pietrusza's talk on "Silent Cal's Almanack' for inclusion in its online "C-SPAN Classroom" initiative for the nation's social studies teachers.
Silent Cal's Almanack includes:
* The ultimate distillation of Calvin Coolidge political wisdom.
* A selection of Silent Cal's key speeches.
* A thought-provoking original biographical essay.
* A fascinating and unique 50-page portfolio of Coolidge photos, editorial cartoons and campaign memorabilia.
* A Coolidge timeline.
* A Coolidge bibliography.
"He wrote simply, innocently, artlessly," H. L. Mencken once noted regarding Coolidge's prose, "He forgot all the literary affectations and set down his ideas exactly as they came into his head. The result was a bald, but strangely appealing piece of writing-a composition of almost Lincolnian austerity and beauty. The true Vermonter was in every line of it."
Supreme Court Justice David Souter recently wrote of Calvin Coolidge: "The simple beauty of his English prose exceeds anything I could say in praise of it."
About the author:
David Pietrusza, a contributing editor of The New York Sun, is the award-winning author of:
* 1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year that Changed America Forever
* 1920: The Year of the Six Presidents (included among Kirkus Reviews Books of the Year 2007; a Selection of the History Book Club)
* 1960--LBJ vs. JFK vs. Nixon: The Epic Campaign That Forged Three Presidencies (Library Journal [starred review]: "raises the bar." Booklist: "an outstanding re-examination." Kirkus: "colorful . . . lively")
* Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius who Fixed the 1919 World Series (an Edgar Award Finalist; its audio version captured the AUDIOFILE Earphones Award)
* Judge and Jury: The Life and Times of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis (a CASEY Award Winner; Seymour Medal Finalist; and NASSH Award Nominee).
Pietrusza's powerful historical story-telling has been compared to that of Doris Kearns Goodwin, Theodore S. White, and Gene Fowler.
An expert on the 1920s, Pietrusza is a member of the National Advisory Board of the Calvin Coolidge Memorial Foundation and has served on the Board of the Directors of the foundation.
He is also the author of The Roaring Twenties, an examination of the era for younger readers.
A respected commentator, Pietrusza has appeared on C-SPAN BookTV, C-SPAN American History TV, The History Channel, NPR, the Fox News Network, ESPN, WCBS-TV, and the Fox Sports Channel.
C-SPAN has selected Mr. Pietrusza's talk on "Silent Cal's Almanack' for inclusion in its online "C-SPAN Classroom" initiative for the nation's social studies teachers.
Other Formats:
Paperback
$14.49
An amazingly fresh approach to a much covered subject....A riveting new account of Theodore Roosevelt's impassioned crusade for military preparedness as America fitfully stumbles into World War I, spectacularly punctuated by his unique tongue-lashings of the vacillating Woodrow Wilson, his rousing advocacy of a masculine, pro-Allied "Americanism," a death-defying compulsion for personal front-line combat, a gingerly rapprochement with GOP power brokers--and, yes, perhaps, even another presidential campaign.
Roosevelt is a towering Greek god of war. But Greek gods begat Greek tragedies. His own entreaties to don the uniform are rebuffed, and he remains stateside. But his four sons fight "over there" with heartbreaking consequences: two are wounded; his youngest and most loved child dies in aerial combat. Yet, though grieving and weary, TR may yet surmount everything with one monumentally odds-defying last triumph. Poised at the very brink of a final return to the White House, death stills his indomitable spirit.
In his lively, witty, blow-by-blow style, David Pietrusza captures, through the lens of the Bull Moose, the 1916 presidential campaign, America's entry into the Great War in 1917, Woodrow Wilson's presidency, and the last years of one of American history's greatest men, who said on his death bed at the age of sixty, "I promised myself that I would work up to the hilt until I was sixty, and I have done it. I have kept my promise...." Pietrusza not only transports readers with his dramatic portraits of TR, his hated rival Wilson, and politics in wild flux but also poignantly chronicles the horrific price a family pays in war.
Roosevelt is a towering Greek god of war. But Greek gods begat Greek tragedies. His own entreaties to don the uniform are rebuffed, and he remains stateside. But his four sons fight "over there" with heartbreaking consequences: two are wounded; his youngest and most loved child dies in aerial combat. Yet, though grieving and weary, TR may yet surmount everything with one monumentally odds-defying last triumph. Poised at the very brink of a final return to the White House, death stills his indomitable spirit.
In his lively, witty, blow-by-blow style, David Pietrusza captures, through the lens of the Bull Moose, the 1916 presidential campaign, America's entry into the Great War in 1917, Woodrow Wilson's presidency, and the last years of one of American history's greatest men, who said on his death bed at the age of sixty, "I promised myself that I would work up to the hilt until I was sixty, and I have done it. I have kept my promise...." Pietrusza not only transports readers with his dramatic portraits of TR, his hated rival Wilson, and politics in wild flux but also poignantly chronicles the horrific price a family pays in war.
Dance Hall: A Novel of Sing Sing
Nov 14, 2014
$0.99
INSPIRED BY TRUE STORIES OF DEPRESSION-ERA SING SING
.
A Brooklyn stickup artist, his taxi-dancing wife, a murderous newspaperman, a risk-taking warden, and a wife with a dark past converge in 1930s Sing Sing heading toward death, redemption-and Ebbets Field.
***
"DANCE HALL: A NOVEL OF SING SING" unveils a grand and riveting tale of a violent and desperate past, unforgettably narrated in a gripping, often wry, fashion--recorded in tears and punctuated in--rarely innocent--blood.
.
Dance Hall flawlessly transports readers to a seedy, volatile 1930s underworld where love and honor and redemption jostle for mere survival with greed and lust and betrayal.
.
Dance Hall reveals the story of a Brooklyn stickup artist, his taxi-dancing Filipina spouse, a murderous newspaperman, a risk-taking warden, and a wife with a dark past converging in Sing Sing, destined for love, death, forgiveness, redemption--and Ebbets Field.
.
Dance Hall reveals a page-turning web of perfectly-balanced back stories: of a young parish priest gone wrong and then right again, of a brutal Bowery killer with escape on his mind, a con man with the vestige of a conscience, a thuggish Garment District goon with a devout sister, a tell-all Broadway gossip columnist who can make or break you, a rat of an accomplice, a once-disgraced private detective who now surprisingly elevates a principle above a paycheck.
.
Read Dance Hall and you live and breathe life inside cold and desperate prison halls and cells; sweaty and often violent Brooklyn dime-a-dance dance halls; threadbare tenements, back-alley speakeasies where anything you wanted badly enough was for sale; the offices of the rich and powerful and still conflicted; and of a waiting area for Sing Sing's "Death Row" called "The Dance Hall"--all while returning you to Depression days when hope reigned supreme.
.
Because hope was all you had.
***
Excerpts:
"BANG!!! A shot sundered whatever peace resided on Amsterdam Avenue--BANG!!!--another. Foxy Renard felt his left arm sting. He knew he'd been hit but didn't know whether the bullet had grazed him or hit bone, how much he was bleeding or even whether or not he bled at all. He didn't have much experience being a clay pigeon. Maybe, he thought, it was just a flesh wound, like in the movies or the radio or the detective magazines or the dime novels. Nothing to really worry about, except there never is such thing as just a flesh wound when it's your flesh"
"Mrs. Larrabee across the hall took Nick [Strecker] in--providing him with a roof over his head but not much more. It might be said that Mr. Larrabee was a mean drunk, but it was exceedingly difficult to ascertain if he was any meaner drunk than sober for he never seemed sober at all. For safety and sanity, young Nick wandered the streets. He hired out for errands of dubious legality. He rolled drunks in stinking, rat-filled alleyways--there was, after all, no shortage of inebriates on Ludlow Street. He pinched what he could from pushcart vendors and shopkeepers and ran like hell. He was an Artful Dodger without a Fagin, on the road to becoming a Bill Sikes without a Nancy."
.
A Brooklyn stickup artist, his taxi-dancing wife, a murderous newspaperman, a risk-taking warden, and a wife with a dark past converge in 1930s Sing Sing heading toward death, redemption-and Ebbets Field.
***
"DANCE HALL: A NOVEL OF SING SING" unveils a grand and riveting tale of a violent and desperate past, unforgettably narrated in a gripping, often wry, fashion--recorded in tears and punctuated in--rarely innocent--blood.
.
Dance Hall flawlessly transports readers to a seedy, volatile 1930s underworld where love and honor and redemption jostle for mere survival with greed and lust and betrayal.
.
Dance Hall reveals the story of a Brooklyn stickup artist, his taxi-dancing Filipina spouse, a murderous newspaperman, a risk-taking warden, and a wife with a dark past converging in Sing Sing, destined for love, death, forgiveness, redemption--and Ebbets Field.
.
Dance Hall reveals a page-turning web of perfectly-balanced back stories: of a young parish priest gone wrong and then right again, of a brutal Bowery killer with escape on his mind, a con man with the vestige of a conscience, a thuggish Garment District goon with a devout sister, a tell-all Broadway gossip columnist who can make or break you, a rat of an accomplice, a once-disgraced private detective who now surprisingly elevates a principle above a paycheck.
.
Read Dance Hall and you live and breathe life inside cold and desperate prison halls and cells; sweaty and often violent Brooklyn dime-a-dance dance halls; threadbare tenements, back-alley speakeasies where anything you wanted badly enough was for sale; the offices of the rich and powerful and still conflicted; and of a waiting area for Sing Sing's "Death Row" called "The Dance Hall"--all while returning you to Depression days when hope reigned supreme.
.
Because hope was all you had.
***
Excerpts:
"BANG!!! A shot sundered whatever peace resided on Amsterdam Avenue--BANG!!!--another. Foxy Renard felt his left arm sting. He knew he'd been hit but didn't know whether the bullet had grazed him or hit bone, how much he was bleeding or even whether or not he bled at all. He didn't have much experience being a clay pigeon. Maybe, he thought, it was just a flesh wound, like in the movies or the radio or the detective magazines or the dime novels. Nothing to really worry about, except there never is such thing as just a flesh wound when it's your flesh"
"Mrs. Larrabee across the hall took Nick [Strecker] in--providing him with a roof over his head but not much more. It might be said that Mr. Larrabee was a mean drunk, but it was exceedingly difficult to ascertain if he was any meaner drunk than sober for he never seemed sober at all. For safety and sanity, young Nick wandered the streets. He hired out for errands of dubious legality. He rolled drunks in stinking, rat-filled alleyways--there was, after all, no shortage of inebriates on Ludlow Street. He pinched what he could from pushcart vendors and shopkeepers and ran like hell. He was an Artful Dodger without a Fagin, on the road to becoming a Bill Sikes without a Nancy."
$7.99
“Persuasive, imaginative, and unfailingly entertaining”
That’s how James Grant, in the introduction to “It Shines For All,” describes the four dozen editorials on the gold standard that make up this volume from The New York Sun. “They constitute . . . a unique record of America’s monetary struggles — and of the world’s — in the first decade of the 21st century.”
· When scientists discovered that the official kilogram, a cylinder of platinum that had been locked away for more than a century, has been losing mass, only the Sun asked this question: Why not float the kilogram, just like we float the dollar?
· When Sarah Palin was ridiculed for questioning Ben Bernanke’s policy on the eve of the summit in Korea, the Sun was the first newspaper to defend her — sketching, in “Sarah Palin’s Seoul,” what sound money would mean for the international financial crisis.
“The position of the Sun is that there are three circumstances when it makes sense to move to a system of sound money. One is when a currency is collapsing. Two is when it is steady. And three is when it is appreciating. What one really wants, at any point, is the confidence that the dollar will remain exchangeable for gold over a long period and that people will have confidence in that.”
— From “The Moment for Gold”
“This brilliant book is The Federalist Papers for a gold standard. It succinctly, dazzlingly – and convincingly – makes the irrefutable case for re-linking the battered dollar to gold. Alexander Hamilton would have been impressed – and you will be, too.”
— Steve Forbes
“Classics of the editorial writing genre — just in time for the reckoning over the dollar. Couldn’t be more timely.”
— David Stockman
That’s how James Grant, in the introduction to “It Shines For All,” describes the four dozen editorials on the gold standard that make up this volume from The New York Sun. “They constitute . . . a unique record of America’s monetary struggles — and of the world’s — in the first decade of the 21st century.”
· When scientists discovered that the official kilogram, a cylinder of platinum that had been locked away for more than a century, has been losing mass, only the Sun asked this question: Why not float the kilogram, just like we float the dollar?
· When Sarah Palin was ridiculed for questioning Ben Bernanke’s policy on the eve of the summit in Korea, the Sun was the first newspaper to defend her — sketching, in “Sarah Palin’s Seoul,” what sound money would mean for the international financial crisis.
“The position of the Sun is that there are three circumstances when it makes sense to move to a system of sound money. One is when a currency is collapsing. Two is when it is steady. And three is when it is appreciating. What one really wants, at any point, is the confidence that the dollar will remain exchangeable for gold over a long period and that people will have confidence in that.”
— From “The Moment for Gold”
“This brilliant book is The Federalist Papers for a gold standard. It succinctly, dazzlingly – and convincingly – makes the irrefutable case for re-linking the battered dollar to gold. Alexander Hamilton would have been impressed – and you will be, too.”
— Steve Forbes
“Classics of the editorial writing genre — just in time for the reckoning over the dollar. Couldn’t be more timely.”
— David Stockman
Other Formats:
Paperback
$0.99
NEW! IMPROVED EBOOK FORMATTING!
From the Council of Trent to Benedict XVI's Motu Proprio A new generation of Catholics is discovering the beauty, reverence, appropriateness, and efficacy of the Tridentine Mass. The Traditional Latin Mass, as the saying goes, is "the Mass the martyrs died for." It is also the Mass the faithful lived for and which gave life to them and to the Church itself. This small volume is designed to humbly guide you in an appreciation of the Traditional Latin Mass' beauties, coherence, logic, aesthetics, glories, and graces.
Featuring the works of: The Council of Trent Pius V Pius X Pius XI Pius XII John XXIII Paul VI John Paul II Benedict XVI St. Charles Borromeo Fr. Adrian Fortescue Bl. John Henry Cardinal Newman Alfons Cardinal Stickler Dom Fernand Cabrol Michael Davies Fr. Uwe Michael Lang Bp. Athanasius Schneider Fr. John T. Zuhlsdorf Micheal S. Rose . . . and more.
"I am sure that this book will help many to better understand the great graces that have been opened again to the whole
Church by the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum."
--Msgr. R. Michael Schmitz, Vicar General in the Institute of Christ the King, Provincial Superior for the Institute in the
United States
"belongs in the library of any Catholic person or organization devoted to the Traditional Latin Mass. . . . If the priest who says that form in your parish or chapel doesn't already have a copy, it would make a most appropriate gift."
—Una Voce America Nota
"a much needed work . . . a precious gem in our library of liturgical works."
—Fr. C. Frank Phillips, Cannons Regular of St. John Cantius
The Kindle edition contains the instruction UNIVERSAE ECCLESIAE of 30 April 2011.
From the Council of Trent to Benedict XVI's Motu Proprio A new generation of Catholics is discovering the beauty, reverence, appropriateness, and efficacy of the Tridentine Mass. The Traditional Latin Mass, as the saying goes, is "the Mass the martyrs died for." It is also the Mass the faithful lived for and which gave life to them and to the Church itself. This small volume is designed to humbly guide you in an appreciation of the Traditional Latin Mass' beauties, coherence, logic, aesthetics, glories, and graces.
Featuring the works of: The Council of Trent Pius V Pius X Pius XI Pius XII John XXIII Paul VI John Paul II Benedict XVI St. Charles Borromeo Fr. Adrian Fortescue Bl. John Henry Cardinal Newman Alfons Cardinal Stickler Dom Fernand Cabrol Michael Davies Fr. Uwe Michael Lang Bp. Athanasius Schneider Fr. John T. Zuhlsdorf Micheal S. Rose . . . and more.
"I am sure that this book will help many to better understand the great graces that have been opened again to the whole
Church by the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum."
--Msgr. R. Michael Schmitz, Vicar General in the Institute of Christ the King, Provincial Superior for the Institute in the
United States
"belongs in the library of any Catholic person or organization devoted to the Traditional Latin Mass. . . . If the priest who says that form in your parish or chapel doesn't already have a copy, it would make a most appropriate gift."
—Una Voce America Nota
"a much needed work . . . a precious gem in our library of liturgical works."
—Fr. C. Frank Phillips, Cannons Regular of St. John Cantius
The Kindle edition contains the instruction UNIVERSAE ECCLESIAE of 30 April 2011.
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