Lion and the Journalist

The Unlikely Friendship Of Theodore Roosevelt And Joseph Bucklin Bishop

By (author) Chip Bishop

Hardback - £19.99

Publication date:

08 January 2012

Length of book:

336 pages

Publisher

Lyons Press

ISBN-13: 9780762777549

A New York Times Bestseller

Theodore Roosevelt, accidental president, and Joseph Bishop, newspaper editor, met when the future Rough Rider was police commissioner of New York City. This is the remarkable story of mutual loyalty and dedication that ranges from police corruption on the streets of New York, through days of boldness and courage in the White House, to ambition and hardship in the jungles of Panama and beyond.

A New York Times Bestseller

“An ‘unlikely friendship’ has produced an unlikely volume, but one that should be most welcome on anyone’s history shelf. … Read the book with an open mind. It’s a welcome change from dry biography as you ponder the issue of cronyism vs. patriotism.” —Providence Sunday Journal

 
“An entertaining dual biography … Genius … If you’re a T.R. fan, you’ll find much to enjoy in these pages. Bishop has a gift for scene-setting and clear narratives that moves his principals along smartly. … The author’s meticulous research and vivid writing make The Lion and the Journalist a worthy addition to the big-shelf of books on America’s Progressive Era.” —Barnstable Patriot
 
“A revealing look at the relationship between two very different personalities joined by common belief and shared savviness about how the world works. … Bishop has put a real face on the Roosevelt popular caricature, and he has described, through the words of his forebear, the national life that we were living when America was deciding what it would grow up to be.” —Martha’s Vineyard Times
 
"Bishop does an excellent job illustrating the dynamics of the relationship ... and an exceptional job of showing how it strengthened and altered with the passage of time, changes in status, increased physical distance, etc. These are the external forces that shape long-term friendships, but they’re seldom explored so intimately and eloquently in biographies of men. The Lion and the Journalist covers a lot of ground. There’s publishing, politics, PR, and the Panama Canal. It’s an unusual historical mélange, but it’s riveting. It's also an especially rich entry into the genre of biographies about biographers and their subjects. For it was Bishop who penned the first biography of Roosevelt, laying the foundation from which all future biographers would begin."
New Books in Biography


“An engaging tour of the busy intersection where history, politics, journalism, and power converge.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
“Bishop taps the enduring interest about TR and his associates. … Active TR collections will cheer Bishop’s addition to them.” —Booklist

 

“A long time coming but well worth the wait, this book elucidates the relationship between a president and a journalist that had important repercussions for both.”

—Tweed Roosevelt, great-grandson of Theodore Roosevelt and president of the Theodore Roosevelt Association

 

“An invaluable contribution to our understanding of Theodore Roosevelt. By chronicling the fascinating friendship between T. R. and journalist Joseph Bucklin Bishop, Chip Bishop identifies one of the central keys to T. R.'s success: his unparalleled ability to forge warm relationships with the members of the press even when they challenged and criticized him. Both figures are brought to vivid life in this compelling book.”

—Doris Kearns Goodwin, Pulitzer Prize–winning author and presidential historian

 

“Who Roosevelt’s first authorized biographer was and how he became such a close personal friend to the president are aspects of T. R.’s life that have never been chronicled, and it is a blessing that Chip Bishop has stepped up to fill that gap in our knowledge. The fresh material he has unearthed about Joseph Bucklin Bishop’s life and the delightful way he has used it to portray President Roosevelt’s relationship with the American press across his lifetime, in particular with his chosen Boswell, may make many a politician, even presidents, long to recover that past age. Fascinating!”

—Nigel Hamilton, author of American Caesars: Lives of the Presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush

 

“Just when we thought there was nothing new to learn about Theodore Roosevelt, comes Chip Bishop’s The Lion and the Journalist, which lifts the curtain on a behind-the-scenes friendship between the iconic president and a prototypical nineteenth century journalist. Here we learn close-up how America’s first media savvy president used the press to his advantage, setting the pattern for all presidents to come. Based on an astounding cache of letters and documents, Bishop’s book will find a deserved place on the Theodore Roosevelt shelf.”
—James McGrath Morris, author of Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power