by Horace Martin Woodhouse (Author)
Next to the jar of jelly beans on his Oval Office desk, President Reagan kept a sign that read: It CAN be done Those four words embodied his blend of Midwestern optimism and Western CAN DO spirit. He was a leader who taught us the art of the possible, an eternal optimist who believed America's best days were ahead. He represented the greatness of the United States which now seems to be steadily slipping away. Just in time for the Ronald Reagan Centennial, this book presents our fortieth president in his own words and poses the question of whether, at this moment in time, America is in desperate need of a hero.
Author Biography
Horace Martin Woodhouse is a celebrated traveler, intrepid explorer, professor of cultural archaeology, and dedicated vagabond. As an author he is both a romantic and a cynic whose writings have appeared in books, anthologies, magazines, newspapers, professional journals, and on the Internet. Over the course of his many years of travel, education, adventure and misadventure, Woodhouse cultivated an intense curiosity about the most interesting people and places in America.