By the time you
read this article, the President’s day holiday will have past. However, this theme gives me the opportunity
to share with you some interesting books that have been published recently.

The next item is
“Dead Presidents: An American Adventure Into the Strange Deaths and Surprising
Afterlives of Our Nation’s Leaders,” by Brady Carlson. The author confesses to
us that he came to this subject about dead presidents while visiting a monument
at Oak Ridge in Springfield. For years
he was taken with the marble sarcophagus for President Lincoln. Growing up he thought everyone visited to be
inspired. He found out that many came to
be tourists not be inspired by these sites.
One time he visited this site he learned that Lincoln was not buried in
the sarcophagus, but was ten to twelve feet below.
This began his search to find out “how we, the ages, choose to remember
and memorialize our dead presidents. . . (p. 5). ” Carlson tells us that it is
not the most famous, but the “obscure or mediocre presidents, “that give us really
interesting stories of their circumstances in death” (p. 7). The author shares
that this book starts “where most stories about the presidents leave off” (ibid.).

Other great books
about presidents include: The Golden Lad: The Haunting Story of Quentin and
Theodore Roosevelt,” by Eric Burns; “Eisenhower: A Life,” by Paul Johnson;
“Jimmy Carter: A Full Life – Reflections at Ninety,” by Jimmy Carter; Reagan:
The Life,” by H.W. Brands; “Lady Bird and Lyndon,” by Betty Boyd Caroli; “The
Quartet: Orchestrating the Second American Revolution, 1783-1789,” by Joseph
Ellis; “The Man Who Would Not Be Washington: Robert E. Lee’s Civil War and His
Decision that Changed American History,” by Jonathan Horn.