An introduction to the White House, the residence of every American president except Washington and for many years, the largest home in the country.
It’s currently staffed by 100 nonpartisan employees, including five full-time florists and the head of the storeroom, who shops incognito for the first family’s groceries in an unmarked Secret Service vehicle. From the building’s construction to its more whimsical occupants, including children and pets, Brower provides a fine overview of what it’s like to live there, but she repeats some anecdotes (such as Dolley Madison’s saving the portrait of George Washington). By relegating all mention of race and prejudice, including that the house was built by enslaved construction workers, to a separate chapter titled “Understanding the Past: Race and the White House,” there is an implication that racism is over and dealt with as well as separate from, rather than an integral part of, U.S. history. Additionally, the only first lady Brower describes as having to get used to the size and grandeur of the White House is Michelle Obama. (And the only baby born in the White House wasn’t little Esther Cleveland in 1893—it was a child of Ursula Granger Hughes, one of Thomas Jefferson’s enslaved cooks, 91 years earlier.) This entertaining treatment conveys genuine respect for White House employees but contains serious missteps when it comes to inclusivity.
Engaging but marginalizing.
(maps, timeline, discussion questions, presidents and first ladies, selected bibliography, further reading, endnotes) (Nonfiction. 8-14)