Winner of the inaugural Theodore Roosevelt Association Book Prize
A captivating account of how Theodore Roosevelt’s lifelong passion for the natural world set the stage for America’s wildlife conservation movement and determined his legacy as a founding father of today’s museum naturalism.
No U.S. president is more popularly associated with nature and wildlife than is Theodore Roosevelt—prodigious hunter, tireless adventurer, and ardent conservationist. We think of him as a larger-than-life original, yet in The Naturalist, Darrin Lunde has firmly situated Roosevelt’s indomitable curiosity about the natural world in the tradition of museum naturalism.
As a child, Roosevelt actively modeled himself on the men (including John James Audubon and Spencer F. Baird) who pioneered this key branch of biology by developing a taxonomy of the natural world—basing their work on the experiential study of nature. The impact that these scientists and their trailblazing methods had on Roosevelt shaped not only his audacious personality but his entire career, informing his work as a statesman and ultimately affecting generations of Americans’ relationship to this country’s wilderness.
Drawing on Roosevelt’s diaries and travel journals as well as Lunde’s own role as a leading figure in museum naturalism today, The Naturalist reads Roosevelt through the lens of his love for nature. From his teenage collections of birds and small mammals to his time at Harvard and political rise, Roosevelt’s fascination with wildlife and exploration culminated in his triumphant expedition to Africa, a trip which he himself considered to be the apex of his varied life.
With narrative verve, Lunde brings his singular experience to bear on our twenty-sixth president’s life and constructs a perceptively researched and insightful history that tracks Roosevelt’s maturation from exuberant boyhood hunter to vital champion of serious scientific inquiry.
The Naturalist
Theodore Roosevelt, A Lifetime of Exploration, and the Triumph of American Natural History
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Release date
April 12, 2016 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780307464323
- File size: 15080 KB
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780307464323
- File size: 15080 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
January 25, 2016
Lunde, a supervisory museum specialist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, sheds light on Teddy Roosevelt’s interests in the natural world and his contributions to the environmental movement in this mix of biography and examination of the field of natural history preservation. Roosevelt’s interests in the natural world were evident from childhood. As a boy growing up in New York City, he collected “as many specimens as possible,” encouraging his parents to do the same when they traveled without him. By the time Roosevelt was a teenager, he had become a “full-bore birder.” At Harvard he took classes on anatomy, vertebrate physiology, and botany, hoping to emulate heroes John James Audubon and Spencer Fullerton Baird. As an adult, Roosevelt studied animals “by shooting them, stuffing them, and preserving them in natural-history museums.” According to Lunde, Roosevelt’s attraction to big-game hunting in Africa satisfied both his yearning for outdoor adventure and his intellectual curiosity. Lunde covers Roosevelt’s environmental activism and his accomplishments in political office, most notably his lobbying for the establishment of Yellowstone National Park, and impressively narrates how Roosevelt was able to pursue his passions during a contentious political career. Agent: Elaine Markson, Elaine Markson Literary Agency. -
Kirkus
March 1, 2016
Teddy Roosevelt: not just hunter, but also gatherer. Young Theodore took inspiration from the yarns of a "novelist and adventurer" named Capt. Thomas Mayne Reid, who blended hunting, natural history, and exploration into stories guaranteed to captivate a frail and bookish lad. It was under Reid's spell, writes Smithsonian Institution mammalogist and curator Lunde, that Teddy began his own natural history collection, starting off with a much-prized seal skull (the rest of the body, we learn, was too decayed to keep) and building from there. At about the same time, he was privy to planning sessions held in his family home for what would become the American Museum of Natural History. Lunde writes that the well-connected young man could easily have become a staff curator, but, inspired by his reading and research and his father's exhortations, he headed for the wild. In this pursuit, he mirrored many other naturalists who went into the field with notebook in one hand and rifle in the other. If much of Lunde's account is a straightforward biography of Roosevelt in scientific mode, a distinct subtext is a kind of nostalgia for the natural history of old and for the "intrepid museum naturalist" whose era "may very well be coming to an end." The author turns up some interesting tidbits on the future president's expeditions, including a lion-hunting trip to Africa helped along by guides in ways that recent critics of a certain Minnesota dentist may recognize; it is useful to learn from Lunde that Roosevelt also had plenty of critics in his own time who decried his apparent bloodlust. More useful still is Lunde's portrait of Roosevelt as a kind of working amateur scientist in communication with professionals and other amateurs to build scientific institutions and, indeed, field science itself. Though a footnote to broader studies of Roosevelt, this book offers well-considered interpretations of "the brainy naturalist and muscular adventurer."COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
February 15, 2016
Lunde (collection manager, Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History) uses diaries and expedition journals as well as his own fieldwork experience to present an empathetic portrait of Theodore Roosevelt as a hunter, collector, nature analyst, and conservationist. Differing from Michael Canfield's Theodore Roosevelt in the Field, which relates how adventuring influenced Roosevelt, Lunde's book stresses how the former president followed in the paths of previous and contemporary naturalists to contribute to the development of the scientific study of birds and mammals. Benefiting from pioneers such as Charles Willson Peale and Spencer Fullerton Baird, Roosevelt consulted and often worked with naturalists including George Bird Grinnell, John Burroughs, and William Temple Hornaday. Lunde describes Roosevelt's faunal studies from the age of eight through the conclusion of his Smithsonian African Expedition (1909-10), more as a specimen gatherer than a sport hunter. (Those interested in his subsequent trip to Brazil should consult Candice Millard's The River of Doubt.) America's rapid urbanization fostered a cultural reaction, in which Roosevelt participated, with a retreat to nature and ultimately society's embrace of environmentalism. VERDICT Colloquially and anecdotally written, sometimes graphically detailing the pursuit and skinning of game, this book is accessible to the lay reader and authenticated for the historian.--Frederick J. Augustyn Jr., Lib. of Congress, Washington, DC
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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- Kindle Book
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- English
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