Many men are quick to buy the newest book from their favorite business leader or sports hero. From the late Stephen Covey (a personal favorite of Brett and mine) to former NFL coach Tony Dungy, there is a seemingly infinite variety of modern books on philosophy and leadership from which we can glean advice. And of course, this treasury of self-help tomes extends back far into the past, and books written by men like Teddy Roosevelt, Frederick Douglass, and Dale Carnegie can be well worth dusting off and cracking open — especially when you’re looking to assemble a cabinet of invisible counselors. Reading books by your “mentors†— even if they’re long gone from this world — is a great way to learn and grow as a man.
What if I told you, though, that there was an even better way? Those men that you revere were quite likely readers themselves. There were books that they devoured and studied over and over that influenced who they were and how they came to see the world. Their own philosophy represents a distillation of all the great works they fed into their minds, so why not trace the stream of their thinking back to the source? Or, as David Leach, a now-retired business executive put it: “Don’t follow your mentors; follow your mentors’ mentors.†Taking in the wisdom of who your mentors admired will get you closer to being of the same mind than simply reading their own memoirs and journals.
With this article, we’re embarking on a series to help you do just that. Every few months or so, we’ll find a man in history who many admire and read about, find what and who he read, and post it here. Beyond being just a fascinating look inside a man’s life, you can use these lists to direct your own reading and expand your mind and character.
The Reading Habits of Theodore Roosevelt
“Books are almost as individual as friends. There is no earthly use in laying down general laws about them. Some meet the needs of one person, and some of another; and each person should beware of the booklover’s besetting sin, of what Mr. Edgar Allan Poe calls ‘the mad pride of intellectuality,’ taking the shape of arrogant pity for the man who does not like the same kind of books.†~TR
Who better to start with than our revered Theodore Roosevelt? We’ve covered his tenacity, his physical strength, his childhood, his integrity – heck, we even have a poster of one of his most famous quotes in the AoM store. He was an influential man to be sure, but who influenced Mr. Roosevelt? What did he read in his spare time? What did he pick up from his library over and over again? I recently stumbled across a letter he wrote to a friend who had asked for book recommendations. Not able to restrain himself, Roosevelt listed over 100 works – and those were only the ones he could remember reading from the previous two years!
“A book must be interesting to the particular reader at that particular time.†~TR
TR was quite famously a rabid reader. He would read a book before breakfast, and another two or three in the evening. It’s estimated he read tens of thousands of books in his lifetime, many of them in other languages. (If you’re asking how this is possible, he was also famously a speed reader. Lucky for you, we’ve written about how to speed read like TR.)
Another key to the vast number of books Roosevelt was able to devour in his lifetime was his remarkable power of concentration. As one biographer wrote, “his occupation for the moment was to the exclusion of everything else; if he were reading, the house might fall about his head, he could not be diverted.” When riding a train on presidential business, he’d sit completely absorbed in his books, disengage to have brief conversations with the delegations that came through his car, and then immediately lose himself once more in the pages before him. Whenever he was reading, he gave off the impression to observers that he was in a completely another world, “as if alone by a campfire in some deep forest.”
“Now and then I am asked as to ‘what books a statesman should read,’ and my answer is, poetry and novels – including short stories under the head of novels. I don’t mean that he should read only novels and modern poetry. If he cannot also enjoy the Hebrew prophets and the Greek dramatists, he should be sorry. He ought to read interesting books on history and government, and books of science and philosophy; and really good books on these subjects are as enthralling as any fiction ever written.â€
While Roosevelt was renowned for his ability to direct his full attention to a book, he was not at all opposed to the idea of skimming when necessary. He would jump around to try to get the meaty nuggets of text that would inspire him or force him to think critically about something. Regarding Dickens, he wrote, “The wise thing to do is simply to skip the bosh and twaddle and vulgarity and untruth, and get the benefit out of the rest.†When reading Greek history, he might take in a chapter or two before setting it back down for a few months. He didn’t live by any hard and fast rules of reading in which he had to finish everything he picked up. He did what worked for him, and ended up being one of the most well-read men in all of history.
Below you’ll find the list that TR sent to his friend in its entirety. Peruse it, use it for your own reading life, and enjoy it. You’ll find everything from Greek history and tragedy, to the dramas of Shakespeare, to modern popular novels, and treatises on the outdoors. He noted in his letter that he had read over half of these titles multiple times – an incredible feat in its own right.
While you can use this as your next reading list, I would not recommend being too fastidious about it. If you don’t enjoy a book on the list or don’t find it interesting, then don’t continue reading. Mr. Roosevelt was clear that each man enjoys different things, and those are the things he should pursue (but especially fiction and poetry!).
Note: They are in the order that Roosevelt listed them in his letter.
Theodore Roosevelt’s Reading List
Title | Author |
The History of the Peloponnesian War | Thucydides |
The Histories | Herodotus |
The Histories | Polybius |
Plutarch’s Lives | Plutarch |
Oresteia Trilogy | Aeschylus |
Seven Against Thebes | Aeschylus |
Hippolytus | Euripides |
The Bacchae | Euripides |
Frogs | Aristophanes |
Politics | Aristotle |
Early Age of Greece | William Ridgeway |
Alexander the Great | Benjamin Ide Wheeler |
History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria | Gaston Maspero |
Chronicles | Froissart |
The Memoirs of Baron de Marbot | Baron de Marbot |
Charles XII and the Collapse of the Swedish Empire | Robert Nisbet Bain |
Types of Naval Officers | AT Mahan |
Critical and Historical Essays | Thomas Macaulay |
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire | Edward Gibbon |
The Life of Prince Eugene | Prince Eugene of Savoy |
Life of Lieut.-Admiral De Ruyter | G Grinnell-Milne |
Life of Sobieski | John Sobieski |
Frederick the Great | Thomas Carlyle |
Abraham Lincoln: A History | Hay and Nicolay |
Speeches and Writings | Abraham Lincoln |
The Essays | Francis Bacon |
Macbeth | Shakespeare |
Twelfth Night | Shakespeare |
Henry IV | Shakespeare |
Henry the Fifth | Shakespeare |
Richard II | Shakespeare |
Paradise Lost | John Milton |
Poems | Michael Drayton |
Nibelungenlied | Anonymous |
Inferno | Dante (prose translation by Carlyle) |
Beowulf | (Samuel H. Church translation) |
Heimskringla: Lives of the Norse Kings | Snorri Sturluson |
The Story of Burnt Njal | (George Dasent translation) |
Gisli the Outlaw | (George Dasent translation) |
Cuchulain of Muirthemne | (Lady Gregory translation) |
The Affected Young Ladies | Moliere |
The Barber of Seville | Gioachino Rossini |
The Kingis Quair | James I of Scotland |
Over the Teacups | Oliver Wendell Holmes |
Shakespeare and Voltaire | Thomas Lounsbury |
Sevastopol Sketches | Leo Tolstoy |
The Cossacks | Leo Tolstoy |
With Fire and Sword | Henryk Sienkiewicz |
Guy Mannering | Sir Walter Scott |
The Antiquary | Sir Walter Scott |
Rob Roy | Sir Walter Scott |
Waverly | Sir Walter Scott |
Quentin Durward | Sir Walter Scott |
Marmion | Sir Walter Scott |
The Lay of the Last Minstrel | Sir Walter Scott |
The Pilot | James Fenimore Cooper |
Tom Sawyer | Mark Twain |
The Pickwick Papers | Charles Dickens |
Nicholas Nickleby | Charles Dickens |
Vanity Fair | William Makepeace Thackeray |
The History of Pendennis | William Makepeace Thackeray |
The Newcomes | William Makepeace Thackeray |
The Adventures of Philip | William Makepeace Thackeray |
The White Company | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle |
Charles O’Malley | Charles Lever |
Poems | John Keats |
Poems | Robert Browning |
Poems | Edgar Allan Poe |
Poems | Lord Alfred Tennyson |
Poems | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
Poems | Rudyard Kipling |
Poems | Bliss Carman |
Tales | Edgard Allan Poe |
Essays | James Russell Lowell |
Complete Stories | Robert Louis Stevenson |
British Ballads | William Allingham |
The Simple Life | Charles Wagner |
The Rose and the Ring | William Makepeace Thackeray |
Fairy Tales | Hans Andersen |
Grimm’s Fairy Tales | Grimm Bros |
The Story of King Arthur | Howard Pyle |
Complete Tales of Uncle Remus | Joel Chandler Harris |
The Woman Who Toils | Bessie Van Vorst |
The Golden Age | Kenneth Grahame |
All on the Irish Shore | Somerville & Ross |
Some Experiences of an Irish R.M. | Somerville & Ross |
Asia and Europe | Meredith Townsend |
Youth: A Narrative | Joseph Conrad |
Works | Artemus Ward |
Stories of a Western Town | Octave Thanet |
My Reminiscences of the Anglo-Boer War | Ben Viljoen |
Through the Subarctic Forest | Warburton Pike |
Cross Country with Horse and Hound | Frank Sherman Peer |
Ways of Nature | John Burroughs |
The Real Malay | Frank Swettenham |
Gallops | David Gray |
Napoleon Jackson | Ruth Stuart |
The Passing of Thomas | Thomas Janvier |
The Benefactress | Elizabeth von Arnim |
People of the Whirlpool | Mabel Osgood Wright |
Call of the Wild | Jack London |
The Little Sheperd of Kingdom Come | John Fox |
The Captain of the Gray-Horse Troop | Hamlin Garland |
The Gentleman from Indiana | Booth Tarkington |
The Crisis | Winston Churchill |
John Ermine of the Yellowstone | Frederic Remington |
The Virginian | Owen Wister |
Red Men and White | Owen Wister |
Philosophy 4 | Owen Wister |
Lin McLean | Owen Wister |
The Blazed Trail | Stewart Edward White |
Conjuror’s House | Stewart Edward White |
The Claim Jumpers | Stewart Edward White |
American Revolution | George Otto Trevelyan |
Tags: Books