Antelope Valley Press

‘President Garfield’ chronicles short presidency

- By ANDREW DeMILLO

Writing a book about James Garfield is no easy task. The 20th president who served the second shortest amount of time in the White House is popularly known more for his assassinat­ion than what he did in office.

But in “President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier,” C.W. Goodyear admirably remedies that with a book that demonstrat­es the long shadow Garfield’s life and legacy has left our country.

The authoritat­ive biography chronicles the life of a man who, in many ways, was one of the most well-spoken and intellectu­al men to hold the title of commander-in-chief. Underscori­ng that, every chapter opens with a different quote from Shakespear­e that Garfield jotted down in his diary.

But Goodyear makes the case that Garfield’s strength didn’t come from showmanshi­p or his speeches — though some of them resonate just as much as Abraham Lincoln’s.

With much of the book understand­ably focusing on Garfield’s time in Congress, Goodyear portrays him as someone who “embraced

undramatic efficiency in the driest fields of lawmaking imaginable” in a town that attracts its fair share of show horses.

That approach was key in his role in Congress on Reconstruc­tion and his advocacy for education, including as the father of the first Department of Education. The former college president was also a strong advocate for universal education as a solution to racial injustice.

Garfield’s short time in the White House still is given the attention it deserves, and that includes the story of his assassinat­ion. Though it takes up a briefer section of the biography, Goodyear describes in chilling detail the president’s killing as well as the horror show of medical blunders that contribute­d to his death.

With his engaging writing and comprehens­ive research, Goodyear’s biography offers a reassessme­nt of Garfield that’s a welcome introducti­on to the statesman.

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