Description
Book Synopsis"The best new discussion of the primary system." —Jill Lepore, author of
These TruthsTrade Review"Dazzling…Cowan brings fresh depth and breadth to this sordid tale." -- Robert Merry - Wall Street Journal
"A rich, eye-popping political history. Teddy Roosevelt was a progressive hero, but he could play as rough as today’s most cynically expedient politicians." -- Evan Thomas, author of Being Nixon and Robert Kennedy
"A lively, relevant primer in the sausage-making of candidate selection…Few historians have given this shameful chapter in the Progressive Party the attention that it deserves." -- Thomas Curwen - Los Angeles Times
"Cowan tells his story with great verve." -- H. W. Brands - Washington Post
"The political process as
Hunger Games: no matter which tribute emerges as victor, the Gamemaker has the power. Teddy Roosevelt changed the system and still couldn’t beat the odds." -- Time
"Admirably nuanced." -- Ari Berman - New York Times Book Review
"A fascinating tale…I found this book revelatory." -- Janet Napolitano, president, University of California
"Lively and detailed history…Besides the sheer action afforded by the vivid narrative and larger-than-life personalities, this book offers obvious parallels with current political fights and illuminates their origins." -- Martha Minow, 300th Anniversary University Professor, Harvard University, and author of When Should Law Forgive?
"A suspenseful narrative, replete with larger-than-life personalities, and a must-read backstory for anyone concerned with the history and fate of a democracy that, at its best, aims to ‘
Let the People Rule.’" -- Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University
"You wouldn’t think that there would be anything new to say about Theodore Roosevelt by now. But Geoffrey Cowan has brought to life a fascinating part of TR’s story usually left out of the history books. He tells it with verve and suspense, warts and all, his insights deepened by his own impressive background as a democracy activist." -- Adam Hochschild, author, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918
"Rips the lid off of the 1912 presidential election. Cowan brilliantly illuminates everything from the birth of the political primary system to the disenfranchisement of African Americans to egos writ large. The narrative has a marvelous flow and the research is superb." -- Douglas Brinkley, professor of history at Rice University and author of The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America
"Cowan has brilliantly re-created a pivotal moment in American political history…brought vividly to life through dogged and creative research and graceful storytelling. Political junkies across America are buckling in for another tumultuous primary season in 2016—and they couldn’t find a better way to prepare than to devour this rollicking and remarkably current tale of how it all began, over a century ago." -- Ronald Brownstein, editorial director for strategic partnerships, Atlantic Media
"A fresh and perceptive look… Based on extensive research in original sources,
Let the People Rule laces striking information on TR’s race against President Taft with new insights and a fresh and important analysis.
Let the People Rule is
the book to read on Roosevelt’s pivotal year." -- Lewis L. Gould, author of The Republicans: A History of the Grand Old Party
"For those of us who believe that modern American politics began at the turn of the twentieth and not the twenty-first century, Geoff Cowan has produced a fresh contribution to the argument. The modern mechanics of presidential selection, the rise of candidacies largely independent of party, and the mobilization of autonomous supporters: all come to life in
Let the People Rule." -- Byron E. Shafer, Hawkins Chair of Political Science, University of Wisconsin