"Of the President I am proud with reason, but the friend I love. And if
I can make you see him so, as a friend and a man, I have given you the
master-key to him as a statesman as well." --Jacob Riis, Theodore
Roosevelt--The Citizen
Theodore Roosevelt--The Citizen (1904) was written by Jacob Riis, a
journalist and good friend of Roosevelt's. Riis explained that his book
was not going to be a formal biography as most people knew Roosevelt
already. Neither would it be about the meaning of Roosevelt's life as
there were still many more years to come. This biography would be about
Roosevelt, the man and friend of Riis'. It became a wonderful and
personable biography.
Roosevelt and Riis met after Roosevelt had heard about Riis's book How
the Other Half Lives (1890), about the poverty in the slums of New York
City. A few years later, when Roosevelt was New York Police Commissioner
and Riis a police reporter, the two often worked together. Both
passionate for reform and improvement of people's lives, they became
good friends.