"The power of this book is that it goes where no one that I know of has yet gone. Reading The Glory and the Burden, it is clear you are listening to someone who knows his subject from soup to nuts. Schmuhl writes brightly, with touches of humor; he may be an academic, but he doesn't write like one. The book plows new ground, making sense of what appears to be inexplicable and upsetting to many."—Tom Bettag, former executive news producer at ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN
“For much of his life, author and professor Robert Schmuhl has made words dance—for his students, in his many essays, and in his books. He has also danced back and forth between the academic realm and journalism with verve, a keen eye, and prolific publishing. In The Glory and the Burden, Schmuhl offers his ‘summary reflections’ on the critical institution of the presidency, which has animated his writing for decades. It looks at the big picture of how the office has functioned and who wins it. It’s the kind of book that every American should read in the run-up to the next presidential election.” --Robert Costa, national political reporter for The Washington Post and moderator of Washington Week on PBS
"Presidents are people, yes—but they're also mirrors, deft reflections of who we are as a nation. In this engagingly astute and beautifully written study, Robert Schmuhl puts the presidency on the couch, thereby revealing what makes it—and us, too—tick." —Julia Keller, Pulitzer Prize-winning writer
"[An] important and timely book. . . . Will there be four-in-a-row after 2020? Most of us hope not—but while we may deprecate Trump’s presidency, what this book tells us is that the problems besetting the presidency are bigger than any one individual’s incompetence or lack of character; the problem is systemic." —The Irish Catholic
"It’s been about 75 years since Franklin D. Roosevelt’s four-term presidency, an extended run in office now prohibited by constitutional amendment. The two-term maximum is among the changes that emerged from FDR’s tenure and, Schmuhl argues, have shaped the office and its occupants ever since." —Notre Dame Magazine
"Schmuhl shows that, in recent decades, voters tend to veer from one personality-image to its opposite, giving hope that 2020 will bring a well-spoken, civic-minded leader to the fore." —Shepherd Express