Before Pearl Harbor, before polio and his entry into politics, FDR was a
handsome, pampered, but strong-willed youth, the center of a rarefied
world. In Before the Trumpet, the award-winning historian Geoffrey C.
Ward transports the reader to that world--Hyde Park on the Hudson and
Campobello Island, Groton and Harvard and the Continent--to recreate as
never before the formative years of the man who would become the 20th
century's greatest president. Here, drawn from thousands of original
documents (many never previously published), is a richly-detailed,
intimate biography, its central figure surrounded by a colorful cast
that includes an opium smuggler and a pious headmaster; Franklin's
distant cousin, Theodore and his remarkable mother, Sara; and the
still-more remarkable young woman he wooed and won, his cousin Eleanor.
This is a tale that would grip the reader even if its central character
had not grown up to be FDR.