Kindred Souls: the Devoted Friendship of Eleanor Roosevelt and Dr. David Gurewitsch
(2014)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Open Road Media : Made available through hoopla, 2014
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781497638945 (electronic bk.) MWT11558232, 1497638941 (electronic bk.) 11558232
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The poignant and unforgettable true account of the deep, loving friendship between a handsome physician and the former First Lady, as seen on PBS's The Roosevelts: An Intimate History ¡"I love you as I love and have never loved anyone else." -Eleanor Roosevelt in a letter to Dr. David Gurewitsch, 1955 ¡ She was the most famous and admired woman in America. He was a strikingly handsome doctor, eighteen years her junior. Eleanor Roosevelt first met David Gurewitsch in 1944. He was making a house call to a patient when the door opened to reveal the wife of the president of the United States, who had come to help her sick friend. A year later, Gurewitsch was Mrs. Roosevelt's personal physician, on his way to becoming the great lady's dearest companion-a relationship that would endure until Mrs. Roosevelt's death in 1962. Recounting the details of this remarkable union is an intimately involved chronicler: Gurewitsch's wife, Edna. ¡ Kindred Souls is a rare love story-the tale of a friendship between two extraordinary people, based on trust, exchange of confidences, and profound interest in and respect for each other's work. With perceptiveness, compassion, admiration, and deep affection, the author recalls the final decade and a half of the former First Lady's exceptional life, from her first encounter with the man who would become Mrs. Gurewitsch's husband through the blossoming of a unique bond and platonic love. ¡ Blended into her tender reminiscences are excerpts from the enduring correspondence between Dr. Gurewitsch and the First Lady, and a collection of personal photographs of the Gurewitsch and Roosevelt families. The result is a revealing portrait of one of the twentieth century's most beloved icons in the last years of her life-a woman whom the author warmly praises as "one of the few people in this world in which greatness and modesty could coexist."

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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