Combing through the White House Hair and its shocking impact on the politics, private lives, and legacies of the presidents

Theodore Pappas

Book - 2024

"Discover a fascinating and novel look at the U.S. presidents, the first families, and American history--all through the lens of hair. With meticulous detail, engaging storytelling, and full-color visuals, encyclopedia editor Theodore Pappas combs through American history, teasing out long-forgotten and little-known ways that hair has influenced the presidency and the public and private lives, personal scandals, and tragedies of the men and women who have occupied the White House."--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Anecdotes
Published
[New York] : Harper Celebrate, an imprint of HarperCollins Focus LLC [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Theodore Pappas (author)
Physical Description
xxiii, 230 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliogrphical references.
ISBN
9781400246151
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Few tools for understanding the human animal... can match or surpass the vast... and multidimensional power of our tresses," asserts Pappas (True Grit), executive director of the Encyclopedia Britannica, in this silly account of presidential locks. Sifting through the history of the presidency, Pappas unearths moments when hair was somehow germane--which mostly involve death or publicity. Beginning the account with the famous photograph of a young Black boy touching Barack Obama's hair, Pappas meanders through a series of hopelessly unrelated events: George Washington opted for hair powder instead of a wig because that's what the English wore; hair DNA was used to determine that Andrew Jackson did not die from lead poisoning from the bullets lodged in his body, like many thought; Abraham Lincoln was known for his "shaggy-haired homeliness" in life, and in death that very same messy hairdo "masked the bullet that had shocked the world." Pappas's tone veers between dead-serious and obviously tongue-in-cheek ("Hair was critical to the cover-up," he writes of Grover Cleveland's secret operation to remove a tumor in his mouth, the aftermath of which was hidden by his mustache), making it unclear if the "shocking impact" of the title is meant as a joke. It's wacky and weird fun, if a touch exasperating. (Aug.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A talented writer presents a uniquely entertaining and edifying cultural history of the U.S. presidency via hair. Long before Donald Trump entered politics, Christopher Hitchens said of one of the future president's signature characteristics: "He's managed to cover 90 percent of his head with 30 percent of his hair." The hair of U.S. presidents, their wives, and other significant figures in American history is the subject of this wonderful book by Pappas, who has been the executive editor of Encyclopaedia Britannica for 25 years. While some of the stories the author includes are well known to even casual students of presidential history--why Abraham Lincoln decided to grow a beard, and a recounting of Bill Clinton's controversial haircut--most are novel and enhanced by the author's style and tone, which demonstrate that he had as much fun researching and writing the book as readers will reading it. Pappas is terrific in his examinations of the talismanic qualities of hair in history--e.g., a vignette about Lincoln's secretary John Hay's gifting of the locks of Lincoln and George Washington to a trio of presidents. Additionally, Pappas takes a look at how DNA has figured into the lives and histories of various presidents, including the extracurricular activities of Clinton and Thomas Jefferson. As for Hair, Pappas covers the spectrum, from the sublimely absurd intrigue involving the hair of one of John F. Kennedy's nemeses to the poignant story of whether the harrowing loss of a child turned Barbara Bush's hair prematurely gray. The book is richly adorned with color photographs and illustrations, and insightful and amusing sidebars--e.g., did James Buchanan's hairline have something do with the possible asexuality of the only bachelor president?--accentuate the lively text. The delightful snippets of presidential and U.S. history that Pappas has assembled in this engaging book entertain and inform. A thoroughly fun read for a wide audience. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.