Lexington Books
Pages: 336
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-9049-4 • Hardback • July 2014 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-0-7391-9892-6 • Paperback • March 2017 • $64.99 • (£50.00)
978-0-7391-9050-0 • eBook • July 2014 • $61.50 • (£47.00)
Michael Carew is a professor of economics and finance at Baruch College.
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1The Problem of Roosevelt’s Middle Years
Chapter 2Powers and Constraints of Presidential Leadership
Chapter 3Franklin Roosevelt and Naval Strategy
Chapter 4The Legacy of World War I
Chapter 5From Isolation to Neutrality to Rearmament, 1938-1940
Chapter 6The Shocks of Circumstances, 1940
Chapter 7Setting the Strategic Direction, 1941
Chapter 8The Logic of Ends and Means
Chapter 9The Evolution of a Diplomatic-Military Strategy
Chapter 10The Pursuit of the “Inevitable Triumph”
Bibliography
Index
Carew examines the middle years of FDR’s presidency. Whereas other scholars have criticized FDR's leadership during these years, Carew considers these Roosevelt's most effective years because the president 'recalibrated the priorities of his administration' to meet challenges from abroad. The historiography of this period is more complex than Carew claims, but he presents a competent, textbook-style study of Roosevelt’s policies from 1938 to 1942, making references to FDR's naval expertise. FDR was determined to avoid Wilson’s mistakes, particularly the lack of preparedness that hampered the US war effort in 1917. Roosevelt worked in these middle years to convince the US public to aid those fighting the Axis and to mobilize the US economy to make the necessary supplies while increasing the strength of the US military. During this time, he also crafted a new US military and defense strategy, one designed to achieve total victory over the enemy. It is this strategy that Carew analyzes. After Pearl Harbor, FDR undertook to lead the allied coalition and ensure a postwar world based on US principles, a task Carew claims FDR completed with the 1943 Casablanca Conference. Carew's connections between the two wars will interest nonspecialists. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.
— Choice Reviews
In the year of the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War, Michael G. Carew’s analysis of the conflict’s impact on American thinking a generation later is an insightful and most welcome addition to the literature on Franklin D. Roosevelt’s administration.
— J. Simon Rofe, SOAS, University of London