BRIAN LAMB, HOST:   Doris Kearns Goodwin, author  of " No Ordinary Time," if you  could ask either Franklin Delano  Roosevelt or  Eleanor Roosevelt a  couple of questions, after all  the work you did on this book, what would they be? 
DORIS GOODWIN, AUTHOR, "NO ORDINARY TIME":  I think with  Eleanor I'd like  to understand why she was unable, at a certain moment in  the middle of the war, when he  asked her to be his wife again  and stop traveling and stay home  and take care of him, to say yes  to him.  I mean, I know that he loved  her, I know she still loved him,  and I'd want to say,  "why didn't you do it?  He's going to die soon.  I wish you had done it."  And I think for him I'd want to understand why he couldn't share  himself more fully with anyone. He was the most ebullient, the  most charming, most sparkling personality on the surface.  Everybody thought how warm he  was. But underneath, there was such  reserve in him, and I'd want to try and understand why that was  so, and why he wouldn't give himself more to the people who  loved him.    
 
LAMB:   What makes this book  different than all the rest?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well, I think what I wanted  to do in this book was to  understand not only Franklin and   Eleanor's relationship-- which  has been looked at in many,  many other cases-- but to  understand the whole extended  family that surrounded them in  the White House.  And I came to an understanding  that these two characters really  both needed other people to meet  the untended needs that were  left over as a result of their  troubled marriage.  So, what I came upon was a sense    that the second family quarters  of the White House were really  like a residential hotel during  these years, and there's about  seven people living there, all  of whom are intimate friends of  either Franklin or  Eleanor's.  That was the part that was new  and fun for me.    
 
LAMB:  If you had to ask a question  of either one of them about  personal relationships that they  had with other people, who would  you be most interested in?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I think the person that I'm  interested in for Franklin is  not simply Lucy Mercer-- who  everybody assumes is the central  romantic figure in his life  because she had an affair with  him back in 1918, and it almost  broke up  Eleanor's marriage--  but there's another woman that  I think had an even more central  role to play in his life, and  that was his secretary, Missy  Lehand.  She had started working for him  when she was only 20 years old,  in 1920.  She loved him all the rest of  her life.  She never married, and everybody  in Washington knew that she was  really his other wife.  When  Eleanor traveled, which she  did, like, 200 or 250 days a  year, she was the one who took  care of Roosevelt.  If he had a cold, she'd bring in  the cough medicine to the white  house.  If he were grumpy during the  day, she'd arrange a poker game  at night.  He had this cocktail hour every night, and somehow she'd be the  one to be his hostess.  She really was, on a daily  basis, the closest person in the  world to him.  That's the relationship I'd like  to know more about.    
 
LAMB:   You have, in the book, this  second-floor scenario-- and  we'll get a closer shot here on  some of these names-- why did  you put this in the book?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well, it seemed to me that  what the reader was going to get  from reading the book was, I  hoped, a sense of what it was  like, 50 years ago, to be in the  White House, and because each of  these rooms was occupied by  somebody who was very important  to either Franklin or  Eleanor--  their closest friends, in some  case, romantic friends--  I wanted everybody to see how  close they were; to see that  they could wander around in the  middle of the corridors at  night and actually talk to one  another.    
 
LAMB:  What year was this?    
Ms. Goodwin: This was 1940 to 1945.  So these rooms depict that period at that time.
LAMB: Well, as you can see here, on  the one end, you have Eleanor  Roosevelt's bedroom, and right  across the hall is Lorena  Hickok.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Right.    
 
LAMB:   Now, who... Who was Lorena  Hickok, and what was their relationship?  And this was the second floor of the White House?   
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Right.  Lorena Hickok had been a former  reporter for the "associated  press," and, in fact, in 1933  she was considered the leading  female reporter in the country.  She weighed about 200 pounds,  She smoked cigars, she played  poker with the guys, and she was  really smart.  And what happened is she came to  interview Franklin and  Eleanor  during the campaign in '32, and   Eleanor and she became really  close friends.  She fell in love with  Eleanor,  and more importantly, she  probably helped  Eleanor become  the activist first lady that  she did. It was lorena who came up with  the idea of  Eleanor holding press conferences every week.  Only female reporters could  come. So a whole generation of female  journalists got their start because every newspaper had to  hire a female reporter.  She was the one who came up with  the idea of a syndicated column  that Eleanor wrote every day,  missing only the day that her  husband died, and really helped   Eleanor transform the role of  the first lady from a ceremonial  to an activist one.  And in the course of that she  did fall in love with  Eleanor.   Eleanor I don't think fully  reciprocated it, but they were close enough friends that she  wanted her living nearby.  So she lived in the White House  the entire time during the war.    
 
LAMB:   Also on this second-floor  schematic is... You have a room  in which Harry Hopkins lived in.  And how long did he live in  there, and who was he?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well, Harry Hopkins had been  Roosevelt's chief "new deal"  man, in a certain sense.  During the 1930's he was the  head of the work progress  administration.  He had been a social worker,  originally.  But when the war broke out in europe, in may of 1940, Hopkins  was staying overnight, that night at the White House, and  Roosevelt decided that he  wanted him nearby.  He didn't want him to go home.  He needed somebody that he could  talk to first thing in the  morning, talk to late at night,  and he made Hopkins his chief  advisor on foreign policy.  Hopkins went to see Churchill  before Roosevelt met him; went  to see Stalin before Roosevelt  met him; was really unprecedented in terms... I  mean, he makes Kissinger look  like a mild-mannered guy in  terms of the kind of power that  Hopkins had.  And he was incredibly loyal to  Roosevelt.    
 
LAMB:  How long did he live on the  second floor of the White House?   
 
Ms. Goodwin:   He was there from 1940 to  1942-- end of '42, when he got  married, and Roosevelt was sad  when he... Eventually stayed  there for about six months, with  his new wife, but then she  finally wanted a house of her  own.    
 
LAMB:   Here's another bedroom.  It's called the "rose room," and  you show that Mr. Churchill,  Sara, who is?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Roosevelt's mother, the  indomitable mother.    
 
LAMB:   And Martha.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   right.  Well, that's a pretty  interesting room, that room.  First, whenever the mother came,  she wanted the best bedroom  suite, and that was this room,  the rose suite.  She would come to visit, and  maybe once a month, with her  maids and her servants, and  always being a duchess, in a  certain sense, in the white  house.  And then, also, Princess Martha  was an interesting character  who... She had come to  Washington during the war years,  in exile from Norway.  Her husband was the crown prince, and her father-in-law  was the king of Norway.  In fact, her son is currently  the king of Norway now.  She was beautiful, she was long  legged.  Roosevelt always liked his women  tall, or so it seems.  And I think she had a  gay-spirited kind of conversation that he just  enjoyed, and  Eleanor somehow understood that he needed that  kind of companionship.  So she would visit on weekends,  and keep him company in the  movies, keep him company at  dinners at night, often again  when  Eleanor was away, and this  would be her suite.  But when Churchill came, no one  else stayed in the suite.  Churchill was an incredible character during this period of  time.  He would come and stay for, like, three or four weeks at a  time, and his habits were so exhausting that nobody else  could sleep during the period  of time he was there.  He would awaken in the morning  and have wine for breakfast.  He would have scotch and soda  for lunch; he would have brandy  at night, smoking his cigars  until 2 a.M.; And when he would  finally leave, after being in  the suite for three or four  weeks, the entire White House  staff would have to sleep for  72 hours in order to recuperate from Churchill's visits.    
 
LAMB:   you mentioned-- you had it in  quote marks in the book-- that  the relationship between  Princess Martha of Norway and  FDR Was romantic?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   some of the people who lived  in the White House, at that  time, suggested that she was his  girlfriend, that there was a  real flirtation between the two,  and I suspect that that's what  the element of the relationship  was.  It wasn't somebody he was  working with, like Missy Lehand.  It wasn't some political  partner.  It wasn't some old friend and  companion. It was a flirtatious  relationship.  Whether it went beyond, you know, kissing and romance and  just a sense of pleasure, I  don't know, but it certainly was  that.    
 
LAMB:   also, you show that Anna  stayed in one of those rooms on  the second floor.  She's there in this picture, in  the middle, next to her father.  What was their relationship?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   well, what had happened is an  interesting, and, I think in  some ways, some of the most  moving moments of this period  of time, because Anna had  originally been her mother's daughter.  When Anna was a young girl, an  adolescent,  Eleanor had told her  the story of Lucy Mercer, and  the fact that her father had had  this affair with Lucy, long ago,  and Anna had taken her mother's  side.  And, over the years, the two had grown so close that they wrote  each other letters two or three times a week, and they saw each  other four or five times a year, even when Anna lived on  the other coast. But what happened is, in the  middle of the war, after  Eleanor  rejected Franklin's quest to  stay home and be his wife again,  he got so lonely that he asked  their daughter Anna to come and  take Missy Lehand's place.  Missy, by that point, even  though she was only if in her  early 40's, had had a stroke,  and she could never speak again.  It was one of those devastating  things for Roosevelt, during the  war years.  And because he was so lonely without Missy, and his mother  had also died, just after  Missy's stroke, he asked Anna to  come and stay in the white  house.  And then what happened is, in  some way she became his father's daughter-- her father's  daughter.  She had long legs, she was tall,  she loved cocktails, she could  gossip at night with him. All the things that  Eleanor  never found it easy to do, Anna did.  And, after a while, I think   Eleanor began to feel displaced  by her own daughter, so it was a  very complicated set of  relationships that developed  during this time.    
 
LAMB:   where do you live?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Concord, massachusetts.  Right on main street, right near  where it all began.    
 
LAMB:   why Concord?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   well, I think it was a  compromise.  I love the city.  I grew up, actually, outside of  New York, and my husband loves  the real country.  He'd prefer living in Maine, so 
Concord seemed to be near enough  to Boston that I could have my city life, and near enough to  country that he could feel he  was really living outside of the  suburb-- more country than  suburb.   
 
LAMB:   What's your husband do?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   his name is Richard Goodwin,  and he's a writer also.  In fact, just recently he's been  involved in the "quiz show"  scandal movie because his first  job, after clerking for Justice  Frankfurter, was to investigate  the rigged television quiz  shows, so he's having a great  time right now.  He's being portrayed as a  27-year-old actor on the big  screen, feeling like decades  have dropped off his life, so  it's really been fun.  But mostly he's a writer.    
 
LAMB:   where did you meet him?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   in Harvard.  I was teaching at Harvard.  I taught a course on the  presidency, and taught some  American government courses, and  he came to finish a book.  And I had an office at this  little Kennedy Institute, and he  had an office right next to  mine, so that's how it happened.    
 
LAMB:   and you dedicate the book to  three people.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   right.    
 
LAMB:   who are they?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   three sons.  Probably the most important  people in my life.  One is in his mid-20's; one is  a freshman at Amherst College,  and the youngest one, thank God, is still at home, in high school.  I don't want it to end.  I wish they were four, six and  eight again.    
 
LAMB:   and how many books have you  written?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   three.    
 
LAMB:   what were the other two?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   well, the first one was  "Lyndon Johnson and the American  Dream," and that came out of the  experience, that I will forever  treasure, of having been 23 and  24 years old, and working for  president Johnson in the white  house, and then helping him  with his memoirs.  I still keep thinking Johnson is still around.  I keep thinking he's thinking,  "this book on Roosevelts is 700  pages.  The one on me was only 350  pages. How can you do that?"  So that was the first book, and  it was a great experience to try  and understand that giant of a  man, who I found so sad in his  retirement, while he was at the  ranch, that it was almost like  he had nothing else left in his  life once politics was taken  from him.  So that whole experience, I think, seared into my mind  forever, and made up that first book.  And then the second one was  called "the Fitzgeralds and the  Kennedys," and it was a  three-generation history of the Kennedy family; in fact, partly  made possible by the fact that I was given access to Rose and  Joe Kennedy's private papers  that had been in the attic for  over 50 years, because my  husband had originally been on  the White House staff with John  Kennedy.  So we knew the Kennedy family.  So, I think one of the reasons  why this book on the Roosevelts  means so much is that it's  really the first time I've had  to slog it through as an  ordinary historian, without the  advantage of knowing Lyndon  Johnson or knowing the Kennedy  family, so it's been fun.    
 
LAMB:   is there new information in  the book?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   oh, yes.  I think definitely-- by  choosing this period of time,  and by focusing on the American  home front, rather than the  battlefront-- for all the  thousands of books that have  been written about World War II,  there have been very few that  focus on what happened here at  home, and most of those have  been essay kind of books, like a  chapter on civil rights, a  chapter on the japanese  incarceration camps, or on  women in the factories, but  there have been very little  evidence of trying to  understand Roosevelt's  leadership, how he mobilized this democracy.  In some ways, I think, that's  his greatest contribution, in a  certain sense, to the war, even  more than the strategy of the  war itself-- how he got our  country to produce the weapons  for the war.  That's what won the war, in lots  of ways.  And turning around a peace economy; an isolationist  economy; an economy that was  still in the midst of a  depression, and somehow making  it so productive is a great story.    
 
LAMB:   where did you find the white  house ushers' diaries?   
 
Ms. Goodwin:   this was one of my most  incredible tools that there was  for anybody to see.  They're in the Roosevelt library, and they're on  microfiche.  And what happened is, at the end  of the day, there would be a  White House usher who would  record everything that happened  during the day: Roosevelt awakens at 7:00; has a massage  at 7:15; goes to breakfast,  and then they'd record who he  had lunch with; who he had  dinner with, and then you could  use that as a foundation to go.  For example, suppose he had  lunch with henry stimson, or  Ickes or morgenthau, I knew  that they all had diaries, so I  could go to their diaries to  find out what he talked about  at lunch.  Or they'd record that  Eleanor  was with joe lash, and I knew  that he had a diary.  So, in some ways it was like the  detective's tool.  It was there for anybody to see.  They're public, but they hadn't  been used before.  It was so easy and so wonderful.    
 
LAMB:   quick definitions: who is  Ickes?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Harold Ickes was the  secretary of the interior, whose  son is currently in  Mr. Clinton's White House staff,  and he was called "the old  curmudgeon," at the time.    
 
LAMB:   Morgenthau?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Henry Morgenthau was the  secretary of the treasury, and,  in fact, he's the subject of one  of my favorite stories in the  book, because Roosevelt had an  annual poker game every year,  and it would always be held on  the day that the Congress was  going to adjourn, and the rule  was that whoever was ahead at  the moment the speaker of the  house called to adjourn would  win.  On one particular night,  Morgenthau was way ahead when  the speaker calls to tell  Roosevelt he's adjourning at  9:30.  So, Roosevelt just pretends that  it's somebody else calling--  "i'm sorry, I can't talk to  you.  I'm in the middle of a poker  game," and they continue  playing, until finally at midnight, Roosevelt starts  winning, and he whispers to an  aide, "bring the phone to me,"  and the aid brings the phone.  He said, "oh, mr. Speaker,  you're adjourning now.  That's fine." Roosevelt wins the game.  Total manipulation.  Everything is great, until the  next morning.  Henry morgenthau reads in the newspapers that the Congress  actually adjourned at 9:30,  and he was so angry that he  actually resigned as secretary  of the treasury, until Roosevelt  charmed him back into it.  But there was a real camaraderie among these cabinet members, at  the time. They could play poker together  as well as work together.    
 
LAMB:   as a matter of fact, I  remember somebody else resigning, at one point, and  FDR Wrote him a letter, and  then he writes back...  I don't know whether I can find  fast enough...    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   it's Ickes actually.    
 
LAMB:   where... And then he says,  "I got fluttery all over"? Did  he talk that way?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   it's amazing.  I mean, that's right.  I mean, Ickes resigned several  times.  He'd get upset about policy issues, and he would resign.  So Roosevelt wrote him a very gracious letter saying, "you  can't resign, I need you, you're so important to me, and you're  absolutely right."  Ickes then wrote back saying,  "when I read your letter, I got  fluttery all over, I couldn't  believe it."  He did talk that way, and it showed the kind of awe, in some  ways, that they felt for this man who was still their  president.    
 
LAMB:   I found it.  It just says, "your letter,"  Ickes gratefully replied, "makes  me feel all fluttery.  To have you write about me as  you did, is like an accolade to  my spirit," and he goes on.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I know.    
 
LAMB:   now, how did you go about  this?  Where did you work?   
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I worked, in terms of research, largely at the Roosevelt library, and the  wonderful thing-- that's in Hyde Park, New York-- is that it  made you feel like you were  going back in time, because the  place, the house where  Roosevelt was born, the place  that was  Eleanor's cottage, at  val-kill, looks exactly as it  looked when they were there.  So sometimes, when you're in the  middle of working in a library  room and you take a walk around  these environs, you can really  feel like you're back 50 years  in time.  It was so wonderful.  And then there were these little  motels around the area that you  stay in, right across from the  Roosevelt library, and you do  feel like this is what a  scholar is supposed to be doing,  living right at the place where  your subjects lived themselves.    
 
LAMB:   where is the library?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   it's in Hyde Park, New York,  so for me, from Concord,  massachusetts, it was about a  three-and-a-half-hour drive;  beautiful drive, and the Hudson  river far below.  The house where Roosevelt was  born, which sits only a few feet  from the library, is this  beautiful house that has a great  lawn that goes down to the  Hudson river, far below.  So you're surrounded by beauty,  while you're doing this kind of  old-fashioned research.    
 
LAMB:   you mention Val-Kill .  What's that?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   well, what happened is...  That's the cottage that  Roosevelt had built for   Eleanor and, in typical aristocratic terms, a cottage,  actually, was 22 rooms.  It wasn't a small, little  cottage... But what happened is,  in the 1920's, after his affair  with Lucy Mercer, and they  decided to stay together, it  gave  Eleanor the freedom to go  outside the marriage to find  fulfillment, and she became  involved with a whole group of  women who were activists--  league of women voters, fighting  for reform causes; child labor  laws, and Sara Delano  Roosevelt, Franklin's mother,  always looked askance at these  women.  They would come into the house  with their saddle shoes on, and  their tweed outfits, and they  weren't the kind of fancy people  that she was used to, so  Eleanor  didn't feel comfortable bringing  her women political friends to  the big house where Franklin,  hence Sara, lived.    
 
LAMB:   I just want to show the  picture here of Mrs. Roosevelt,  the mother in the middle.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   and that's the perfect  symbolic picture, in the middle.  When Franklin went to Harvard,  she got a townhouse in boston to  be near him.  When Franklin and  Eleanor got  married, Sara got two town  houses in New York-- one for  her, one for them-- and doors  went right in between.  So anyway, what happened is,  Roosevelt seeing how  uncomfortable  Eleanor felt about  having her friends in the big  house, suggested that he would  build her her own cottage.  And it turned out to be this beautiful 22-room house, about a  mile and a half or so from the big house, and it allowed   Eleanor, for the first time in  her life, to have a home of her  own.  So she loved the place.  And after he died, she actually  lived on that place until she herself died.    
 
LAMB:   now, if you're coming... If  somebody's never been to that  part of the country, how far  from New York city?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   probably a couple hours from  New York city.  I know by train it is.    
 
LAMB:   on the Hudson river?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   along the Hudson river.  In duchess county.    
 
LAMB:   and in those years, in the  war years, that you're writing  about here, domestically, where  did Franklin Delano Roosevelt  and  Eleanor Roosevelt spend  their time, besides the white  house and Hyde Park?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   well, Hyde Parkwas the most  important place for both of  them.  I mean, he went, during the  whole presidency, something like  200 times to Hyde Park.  So that's the most important  place.    
 
LAMB:   how would he get there?
 
Ms. Goodwin:   he would get there by train.  He would often get on the train  in Washington, maybe at 10:00 or  11:00 at night, and it would  reach Hyde Parkby the morning.  So he'd be... So he'd sleep on  the train.  He loved traveling by train.  He had his own compartment.  Because of his polio and his  paralysis, he didn't like  fast-moving transportation.  He hated airplanes, but he could  feel grounded on the train.   Eleanor was just the opposite.  She liked to get places fast, so  she only liked to travel by  plane, but she would go with him  by train, as well.   
 
LAMB:   a couple of quick points.  When did... What year did he  die?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   1945.    
 
LAMB:   do you remember the exact  date?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   april 12.    
 
LAMB:   and what year did he contract  polio, and then have to have the  leg irons?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   1921, when he was only 37  years old, he contracted polio,  and I think one of the things I  understood more by doing this  book than I ever had before, was  how much that paralysis was a  part of his everyday life.  I, like so many people in the  country, had assumed that he had  conquered the polio somehow and  was simply left a bit lame.  But, in fact, he was a full  paraplegic. He couldn't even get out of bed  in the morning without turning  his body to the side of the bed,  and being helped into his  wheelchair by the valet, to get  to the bathroom.  He couldn't even really walk.  He had thick braces on, and if  he leaned on the arms of two  strong people, he could appear  to be maneuvering himself  forward.  And I think one of my... The  most extraordinary moments, when  I was doing research on the  book, I interviewed Betsy  Whitney, who had been married to Jimmy Roosevelt-- the  Roosevelt's oldest son-- and  she said she asked him once, in  the middle of the war, how do  you fall asleep at night with  all the burdens that you have  to face? And as soon as he told her the  answer, I knew that that polio was still a huge part of his  imagination, because he  described that he has his own  method of counting sheep.  He would imagine that he was a  young boy again, at Hyde Park,  and there was a favorite  sledding hill behind his house,  which I've seen from going  there, that led to the Hudson  river, far below.  So, in the presidency, as he's  falling asleep at night, he  would imagine that he was a  young boy again, getting on that  sled, and he said he knew every  curve of the hill.  And when he would get the sled  to the bottom of the hill, at  the river, he would pick it up,  run to the top, and do it over  and over again, until he fell asleep.  And as soon as I heard that, I  thought, "my god, this man is  the most powerful man in the  world, and yet he's imagining,  when he falls asleep at night,  and getting solace from  thinking that he can run, sled,  walk again; the very things that  were denied him at the height of  his powers at 37 years old."    
 
LAMB:   this is a little bit of a  diversion, but... And we need  to get the Lucy Mercer  Rutherford story down someplace here... But at one point, you  talk about, when he would go  from Washington to Hyde Park,  he figured out a way to stop  and see her in new jersey.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   that's right.  She had an estate in Alamoochie, new jersey, and he somehow...  He loved to figure out maps, anyway.  He loved old geography things,  so he figured out the railroad  lines, and knew that if he went  along a different pattern-- and  he had to convince the secret  service it was safe for him to  do this-- that he could spend an  afternoon with Lucy.  Now, this was not until the last  year of his life.  You know, I think some people  had assumed, and myself  included, that he probably had  known Lucy all of his life.  I had heard about this affair,  back in 1918.  I knew he had seen her and was with her when he died, so I  thought maybe it had happened  all the way through that period  of time.  But the truth was that he had  kept his pledge to  Eleanor not  to see her again, really until  the last year of his life, after   Eleanor had refused to be with  him and be his wife again;  after Anna had come back into  the White House, and after he  was diagnosed with congestive  heart failure.  And I think, in that last year  of his life, I believe he knew  in that last year that he was dying.  And he went to bernard baruch's  plantation in... In, I guess it  was march or april of '44, to  recover, and it was there that  he saw Lucy Mercer, essentially  for the first time since 1918,  and she had just lost her  husband, winthrop rutherfurd,  who had been a very wealthy  businessman, come from an old  family, and so she was widowed.  And I believe, when he saw her  then, that what it did more than  anything, was to awaken in him a  memory of what it was like when  he was young, before the polio.  He had known Lucy three years  before his polio attack, and now  before his heart was giving way,  and he decided that he wanted  to see her regularly.    
 
LAMB:   how was... How did he start the original affair with her?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   she had been a social  secretary working for Eleanor.  What happened is, when he was  assistant secretary of the navy,   Eleanor and Franklin moved to  Washington, in 1914, and  Eleanor  felt worried about the whole  social circle of invitations  that you would get to go to,  because you had to know which  "A" list, "B" list you belonged  to go to, as assistant secretary  of the navy, so she hired this  young woman, Lucy Mercer, who  came from a blue-blood family in  Washington, and yet needed money  because her father had been an  alcoholic. And so Lucy came, three or four  days a week, and worked for the Roosevelts, and somewhere in  that period of time, between  1914 and 1918, a relationship  developed between Lucy and  Franklin.   
 
LAMB:   How long was the affair?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   well, as far as we know, it  was sometime... Probably two or  three years in that period of  time, between '14 and '18, but  it came to an abrupt end when   Eleanor happened to come upon a  packet of love letters that  Lucy had written to Franklin.  She later said, when she opened  these letters, that the bottom  fell out of her world, and she  actually offered Franklin a  divorce immediately.  But I'm convinced it was the   last thing he wanted.  I think he had never meant for  the marriage to be over, by his  relationship with Lucy.  In some ways, I think Lucy's  attraction for him was that she  was confident, she was gay, she  was easy; whereas  Eleanor,  during that period of her life,  was still haunted by the  insecurities of her own  childhood, where her mother had  told her she was ugly when she  was a little girl, and her  father was an alcoholic, and the  mother-in-law, Sara, was being  intrusive about the kids, and it  was hard for her to develop a  full sense of herself.  And so I think Franklin felt  attracted to this happy, young,  woman, Lucy Mercer.  But when confronted with the thought of losing  Eleanor, it  was the last thing he wanted.    
 
LAMB:   When did people... Back  there in those days did... What  did the public know?  Did they know about polio?  Did they know about the braces  on his legs?  Did they know about Lucy Mercer?  Did they know about Missy  Lehand?  Did they know about princess  Martha of Norway?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Well, this is one of the  most interesting things to me in  the world.  I mean, certain members of the  press knew about Lucy Mercer.  They knew that Missy Lehand  lived in the White House.  They knew there were an unconventional set of relationships in the White  House.  They certainly knew that Roosevelt was a paraplegic, and  yet there was, then, a certain kind of sense that a president's  private life is his private life.  And unless whatever he's doing  has an impact on his public  activities...  I talked to one old reporter who  said, "who are we to judge?  We're not angels ourselves, so  it wouldn't be sporting somehow  to report on these  unconventional relationships in  the White House."  And as far as the paralysis goes, what astonished me was  that the majority of the people thought, as I did, that he was  simply lame, and the reason they were allowed to feel that way  was that not a single newsreel ever showed him in his  wheelchair, on his braces,  being crippled.  There was almost like an  unspoken code of honor, on the  part of the press, that the  president wasn't to be seen that  way, and if a young photographer  came along, and tried to snap a  picture of the president...  Sometimes reporters would see  him being actually carried from  a car into a building like a  child, and yet they never took  a picture.  If a young guy came along and  tried to do that, an older guy  would knock the camera to the  ground.  So, as a result, there was a  kind of dignity to the office of the presidency then, that I  think is really missing right  now, on both the side of the  press and the president.  Roosevelt understood the  importance of holding his private life secure.  He would never have thought  about talking about his mother's  domineeringness, or his feelings  about Lucy Mercer.  I mean, there was a reserve that  I suspect served us better, at  that time.    
 
LAMB:   You also talk about-- and  it's been talked about before--  I mean, by volumes, of  Mrs. Roosevelt's daily column. Did she write it herself?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Oh, did she ever write it  herself.  Oh, absolutely.  In fact, if you read them,  you can see, the only way it was  possible for her to write that  column, was really a recording  of what she did during the day.  And the only reason the column  worked-- because it wasn't high  thoughts, it wasn't great  moments of issues-- but it was  so warm, just as she was, and  it was so full of activity,  because her schedule was even more extraordinary than his.  When you looked at those ushers' diaries, her daily life would be  three times as long as Franklin Roosevelt's.  She never stopped.  She traveled to migrant worker camps.  She went into the mines.  There's those famous cartoons of  the miners looking up and  saying, "oh, here comes  Eleanor Roosevelt."  She went to visit blacks in the  south.  She went to.C.C. Camps, and  that kind of traveling gave her  experiences that she could  recount in her daily column, and  just tell people what she was  thinking and feeling, as she met  so many Americans in the course  of her travels.    
 
LAMB:   What would happen if you took  the Roosevelt presidency and  moved it to modern-day America?  Column every day, radio show,  you know, handicapped, affairs  and all that. How much of this would still be  hidden?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   It's really scary to think about, because if Eleanor and  Franklin had not been allowed that network of friendships in  the White House that allowed them to sustain themselves,  while they were going through  the difficult days of depression and the war, they  wouldn't have been as strong as leaders as they were.  I'm convinced that Roosevelt  needed the relaxation, for  example, as we said earlier,  that Missy could provide,  and when  Eleanor wasn't there.  But suppose the press was  saying, "well, who is this  woman?  She's his secretary. She's in love with him.  What's going on here?"  At one point, Missy had been  involved with Harry Hopkins.  Can you imagine the press loving... "Oh, my god, Harry's  living there, too.  Is Harry involved with Missy?"  And I think, in some ways, that  if we hadn't had, at that time,  that kind of space for their private lives, they wouldn't  have been replenished as  political leaders.  And so, too... Now, the  paralysis is more interesting, in some ways.  You almost wish that Roosevelt  had had the courage to go to the  public, and say to the public,  "I'm crippled and it's okay."  Because they loved him so much,  in part because of his courage and his strength, but only at  the very end of his life did he ever give a speech sitting down. When he came back from the  altar, he was so tired that he finally excused himself;  instead of standing on his  braces, and sat down.  And, for some reason, that  speech made an enormous emotional impact on the country,  because they then saw that he was conquering this disability.  But, at that time, nobody thought you could go to your country and tell them that you  were a paraplegic; that they  wouldn't allow you to be their president.    
 
LAMB:   How much time did he spend in  Warm Springs, Georgia?   
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well, during the last  presidential years in the war,  he was only down there three or  four times, but prior to the  war, he went down every  Thanksgiving because...
LAMB:   why?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  He had an annual dinner for  the patients at Warm Springs.  He had originally created the  whole Warm Springs rehabilitation center, in the  1920's.  He went down there, initially  because the hot springs that  came out of the ground naturally  in that area, were thought to  help people with polio. So he created a whole rehab  center, and lots of patients  would be down there, and I think  somehow his contagious  confidence helped them to get  through their own polio.  And so he liked to spend every Thanksgiving with them.  That was a pledge he had made so.    
 
LAMB:  Did you go to all these  places?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Yeah, I went to Warm Springs,  and what's so amazing about it,  is that it is such a primitive  setting.  I mean, you look at the little  White House-- which is what  they called the house where  Roosevelt would stay-- and  there's this tiny living room-  dining room that's one combined  room.  His bedroom is the size of a  twin... You know, like a small  boy's bedroom.  And then there's one other  bedroom, that was where Missy  Lehand would stay; and one  other guest room, where Eleanor  would stay, and that's it.  And you keep thinking about imagining much more luscious  surroundings for a president of    the United States.  But he loved the simplicity of it, and it tells you a lot about  him to see that.    
 
LAMB:   What about Campobello?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Well, Campobello was the  place that had been his mother's  estate when he was a young boy, and it's up off the border of  maine and canada, and it was a  beautiful summer home which had  been very much a part of  Eleanor  and Franklin's early romantic  days.  But it was also the place where he got polio, so that they  didn't really travel there much  longer, after those early years.  They went there a lot in the  teens and the early 1920's, but  after he got polio, Franklin's wife, Eleanor, would go up there a lot, because she loved  it, but he didn't go back there  very much after that.    
 
LAMB: What impact did it have on him that he was an only child?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Absolute critical impact.  I mean, he was not only an only  child, but his father was a  sickly man, from the time he was  young, and his mother was a very  young mother, who was told she  could never have other children  after Franklin was born, because  it had been a tough birth.  So all of her love, which was  large, got focused on this  child.  And I think about it, sometimes.  I mean, I think she gave him  probably the greatest asset a  mother can give a child, that  sense of unconditional love. But because he was so important  to her, she never allowed him  the freedom to feel like he  could stand apart from her.  You have the feeling that she  hovered over him all of his  life.  And even though maybe that's the  source of his confidence, one of  my favorite quotes by Churchill  says that when you met  Roosevelt-- and I think Sara  Roosevelt created this in her  son-- he had such inner elan,  such confidence, such sparkle--  that it was like opening your  first bottle of champagne, to be  around him.  And I think that's a great gift  a mother gives a child.  But if only she'd known when to separate, I think he would have  had an easier time with intimacy with other people.    
 
LAMB:  As you know, if you go to the Hyde Park residence-- the two  big chairs by the fireplace--  one is marked "Sara," the other  is marked "Franklin." No chair for Eleanor.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Oh, exactly.  In fact, you go through as a tourist, and the hostess just  says it to you as if it's natural.  "Here's where Sara sat.  Here's where Franklin sat." Then you say, "Well, where did Eleanor sit?"  And they just say, "oh, wherever  she could find a chair."  And then you look at the dining  room, and Sara was at one end, as the hostess, Franklin's at  the other end, as the host, and,  once again,  Eleanor just had to  find a place wherever she could. That house, "that big house at  Hyde Park," as they called it, reflects that Sara remained the  mistress of that house  throughout all of their married  life.  Even after she died, there's  this sad moment when  Eleanor  wants to change the house  around a little to make it her  house, now that her  mother-in-law's finally dead,  and Franklin can't bear the  thought of making any changes  in his boyhood home.    
 
LAMB:  I know this isn't in the  book, but it's a little map that  they give you at... We'll get a  closer shot at it here, at Hyde  Park, but it shows the bedrooms  on the second floor.  You have Franklin Delano  Roosevelt's bedroom and then Eleanor Roosevelt's bedroom,  and that's where his mother stayed.  How often were they all there  together?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Oh, well, Sara would always  be there when Franklin and Eleanor were there, and what's astonishing to look at is the  relative size of those bedrooms.  When you see Franklin's, it's  very large, it's spacious; and  you see Sara's, it's very large  and spacious; and  Eleanor has a single bed in what must have  been the dressing room for one  of the bedrooms in between the  two of them.  That's the part of  Eleanor that she obviously didn't have to take that small of a room, but there was a part of her that  was a martyr, in a certain  sense, and liked to have tough conditions to live up to as a  challenge, because she had been  used to those as a child, and I  found that part very sad.    
 
LAMB:   Harry Hopkins died at age  55.  I'm writing... I wrote this down  when I was going through your  book.  Lucy Mercer died at 57,  Malvina Thompson was...    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Eleanor's secretary; her Missy Lehand.    
 
LAMB:  Died at 61.  Princess Martha died at 53?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Yeah.    
 
LAMB:  Lorena Hickok died at... She  was 75.  Anna, the daughter, died at 64  or 60...?  Well, yeah...    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Yeah, she's pretty young,  too.    
 
LAMB:   How come?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Well, Harry Hopkins, just to  start with him, when he was at  the end of the "new deal" period, he was diagnosed with  cancer of the stomach, and he  had almost his entire stomach  removed, but somehow public  life and public service gave him an extra lease on life, and  when Roosevelt made him his  foreign policy advisor, he  somehow was able to get through  what most people would have  died from.  He was so sick during the war.  He looked like he was dying.  He was so thin, his body was  being eaten away.  And I think what happened is, after Roosevelt died, and there  was no longer room for him in public life, then he himself  finally died.  It was almost like... Churchill  said he was like "a crumbling  lighthouse." He was so full of fire and  energy, it kept him alive, but  his body was giving away on  him.  To understand what happened to princess Martha, I think she,  too, had had some illnesses during her 40's, and she died  relatively young, in her 50's. And so did Lucy.  I mean, tuberculosis somehow  spread and something bad  happened to them.  It seems really strange, especially now as we get older, these people seem much younger dying than I would have thought  when I was younger.    
 
LAMB: How old was FDR When he  died?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: FDR Was 63 when he died.    
 
LAMB:  And how old was  Eleanor  Roosevelt?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Eleanor lasted from 1882 to  1961, so she's 70-something or  other.  She lasted an extra 17 years after FDR's death.    
 
LAMB:  The kids.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  That's not...    
 
LAMB:  How many kids were there?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  That's not a... That's not a  happy story in many ways.  There were five children.  The daughter Anna was the oldest, and then there were four  sons: Jimmy, Elliott, John, and,  um... And somebody whose name  I'm not... Franklin... Franklin,  Jr.  And I think what happened is, it  was hard for the five of them to  grow up in the shadow of that  giant oak of their parents.  And for the four boys...  Actually, the five children had  a... Somewhat combination of 18  marriages between them.  I think they had a hard time  apprenticing themselves to becoming people in their own  right.  They wanted to skip steps and  suddenly become important, run  for senate, run for governor,  as we often see happening, and  they never got their own  confidence on their own.  It's not an easy part of this whole story.    
 
LAMB:   Anna married twice.  Her second husband jumps out of a hotel room in New York city?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Right, he was...    
 
LAMB:  How come?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  He was a manic depressive,  and was under sedation for his  psychological illness.  They had already separated, but he was always troubled.  You can see it even during  their marriage.  They write each other these  amazingly romantic letters--  "my one and only, you're the  most precious I've ever known..."  You feel them clinging to each  other in an almost unnatural  way.  And shortly after the war, her  husband, whose name was John  Boettiger, felt that he no  longer had the platform of the  Roosevelt presidency to stand  on, now that Roosevelt was dead,  and couldn't make his way in  the publishing world anymore,  and got so sad that he jumped  out of a window and killed  himself.    
 
LAMB:   Did you interview John Boettiger, Jr.?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I talked to all three of  Anna's children.  There was  Eleanor Seagraves, her  oldest daughter; and a guy named Curtis Roosevelt, who's her  second child; and then Johnny Boettiger, jr., The son.    
 
LAMB:   John died at age 65, the son  of FDR.  He had two marriages, but died a Republican?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Yes, he was the only one who became a Republican. He actually became a Republican, pretty early in his life, much to the great dismay of the family.    
 
LAMB:   FDR, Jr. Died at 74,  married four times.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Right.    
 
LAMB:  What was he like?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well he did have his father's charm, and people who knew him  said that when he smiled, you  could see FDR And that  sparkling personality, all over  again.  And he did have some success in  politics, and in fact, was very  instrumental in John Kennedy's  campaign in West Virginia  because Roosevelt was still a  magic name in West Virginia, at  the time of the 1960 election,  and they sent FDR, Jr., Down  there to campaign for Kennedy,  and it was considered one of the things that turned the tide.    
 
LAMB:  Elliott married five times.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Elliott married five times.    
 
LAMB:  Died at age 80, in 1990.  What was he like?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Well, I did get a chance to  talk to him before he died.  And again, there'd be that twinkle in the blue eyes that  gave you a memory of Franklin  Roosevelt, but he had had a tough time finding himself.  I think the alcoholism that was in Eleanor's family had visited  itself upon Elliott.  He had a little bit of success  in politics.  He was a mayor in Palm Beach,  but mainly what he did was he  wrote mystery stories, after  awhile, in which  Eleanor  Roosevelt was the detective. So there was always some dead  body, and  Eleanor, his mother, becomes a detective.  So... And he wrote a series of  sort of tell-all books about  the family that all the other kids found very disquieting.    
 
LAMB:  James died at age 83, in  1991; ran "Democrats for Nixon?"    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Right, I mean, you wonder  what  Eleanor and Franklin would  have thought.  He had four marriages, too.  Now, he had had some success as  a Congressman for awhile, from California, but then he never  was able to hold onto his career or to his family very easily, so it's not been an easy time, as I say, for any of those children.    
 
LAMB:  Would you mind jumping to the  end, and telling as much as you  can remember about the last  couple of days of FDR?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well, what had happened was  that, after he came back from the Yalta Conference, and after  he gave this major speech to the Congress in march of 1945,  everybody could see that his  health was failing, and somehow  when he went to Warm Springs,  Georgia, there had always been  this sense that he would  recuperate by going down there;  that something about the air,  the beauty, the simplicity of  the place... So they decided that he'd make an extended trip  to Warm Springs.  So, at the end of march, he went  down to Warm Springs, and  indeed, it did seem... He  brought with him his two  spinster cousins, Laura Delano  who was a... These are characters, too, these cousins... And Margaret Suckley, and they kept him company, and  he didn't have that much work to do, when he was down there,  and for the first week or so, it  seemed like he might be getting  a little bit of his bounce  back, getting some weight back, because he was losing weight tremendously in that last year.  And then at a certain point, he  invited Lucy Mercer to come and  stay with him, and she arrived  about four or five days before  he died; stayed in a little guest house right across the  way from his little white house, and brought with her a painter friend, Madame Shoumatoff, who wanted to do a  portrait of Roosevelt.  And then what happens is that he  seems to be getting better.  He takes these little driving  trips with Lucy.  There was this favorite place he  had, Dowdell's Knob, where you  could see the whole valley in  Georgia, from that place, and  Lucy later wrote that she'd  never forget that day when he  talked to her about all the plans he had, after the  presidency was over, and what he hoped to do with the world, and  how he had still idealism left about what the world would be  like after the war was over.  But, then on a certain morning, on April 12, he woke up, and  people surprisingly thought that  he looked better than he had for weeks.  His color was radiant almost.  Probably it was, as doctors  later said, that the embolism  that later killed him was already beginning to be felt in  his skin and in his coloring. But he nevertheless kept everybody company.  He was a wonderful storyteller, so all that sum... All that  morning, he was talking to Lucy  and her friend, Madame Shoumatoff, who was painting a portrait of him, at that time.  The two spinster cousins are there, and then, suddenly, in  the middle of talking to them, at about noon or so, on April  12th, he just suddenly said, "I have a terrific headache"  and he slumped forward.  And one of the cousins went over to him, thinking he had dropped his cigarette or something, and  then she realized that he had  become unconscious.  So immediately they called for  doctors, they called for help, and they carried him into his  bedroom.  And Lucy knew enough to leave at that moment in time.  She knew she shouldn't be there.  So she and Madame Shoumatoff did leave.  But then what happened is he died about an hour and a half later.  He never regained consciousness.  And they finally called Eleanor and told her.  She was in the middle of giving  a speech, in Washington, when  she found out, and she knew, she  said, the minute the phone rang,  that something had happened.  She could just feel it.  And they didn't tell her that he  had died, they just said "you  have to come back to the white  house immediately."    
 
LAMB:   They called her away from the  dais...    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  They called her away from the  dais.  She was actually... Had just  finished giving a speech, and  someone was doing a piano  concert that she was listening  to, so she excused herself.  Again, she had this amazing  presence, and said "I must leave  now, but I'll be back to see  you, at some point."  She went to the White House, and  they told her that he had died.  So she immediately called for  Harry Truman, the  vice-president, to come, so she  could give the news to Harry  Truman.  And that's one of those  celebrated moments in history.  When Truman says to her, "is there anything I can do for  you?"  And her first response is, "no, but is there anything I  can do for you, for you're the  one in trouble now?"  But then she had the presence of  mind to ask him, was it ethical  for her to use a government plane to go down to Warm Springs to see her husband's  body? And, of course, Truman provided  that for her.  You can't imagine people even  asking that today.  So she gets down to Warm Springs, Georgia-- and as you  would do when there's a death like this-- she asked her  cousins who were there-- Laura Delano, in particular-- "tell  me everything that happened in the last 24 hours."  And Laura, I believe, had always loved FDR, And probably  always had been jealous of  Eleanor, for she maliciously  decided to tell  Eleanor that Lucy had been there. She didn't have to.  Nobody would have told  Eleanor.  She just said maybe she would  have found out anyway.  And, then when pushed further, she elected to tell her that  Lucy had been at the White House that last year, and that Anna,  her daughter, had been the one  to make those arrangements.  I'm... I can't even imagine  what it must have been like for Eleanor to have to present the  strong face to the world that  she did by getting in that  train and going back with her  husband, on that famous train  ride from Warm Springs to  Washington, knowing inside this deep hurt that she felt.  When she got to the White House,  Anna was there, and all that Anna could say was-- as her  mother confronted her, really  angrily, "How could you do this to me?"-- All that Anna said  later she could say was "I  didn't know what to do, I loved  you both.  And I felt caught in a cross  fire." And Anna later said that she was sure that their  relationship had been destroyed forever.  She thought she had lost her mother.  And then what happened... I  knew I didn't want to end the  book, at that point-- even  though a death is a natural place to end it-- because I  just felt so sad, at that  conjury of emotions, so I  decided to follow that story  through the summer and the fall  of '45, after his death.  And then, thank God, what I was  able to find is that, as  Eleanor traveled the country again that  summer, everywhere she went, people kept telling her how much  they loved her husband.  People that she had thought were  her people-- the poor people,taxi drivers, porters-- felt that their lives were so much  better off, at the end of the  war, than at the start.  And she'd been fighting him all  through the war.  She wanted the war to be a  vehicle for social reform on  civil rights; on day care in the  factory.  She kept wanting more than he  could provide.  But now she saw, she later said,  in the summer of '45, that the  country was indeed a better  place; that blacks had worked  in factories they never had  before.  They'd done well in the  military; that women had this  great sense of mastery from  having been 60% of the workforce  during the war; veterans were  going to college on the G.I.  Bill of Rights; unions were  stronger than ever before; and she said, as she heard all these  tales, she began to feel a sense  of how much the country owed to  Franklin Roosevelt.  And, as she felt that, she was  somehow, amazingly, able to  forgive him for what had  happened.  And then, finally in August of  '45, after the bomb was dropped,  she was able to go to... And  the war came to an end... She  was able to go to Anna, her  daughter, and forgive her as  well, affording a reconciliation  between the two of them that  really lasted for the rest of  their lives. And I must say, as a biographer,  when I learned that, my heart just felt so full in knowing  this woman has done something  I'm not sure I could have done.  Could I have the kind of spirit  to forgive such a deep hurt like  that?  But it was so wonderful for her  that she did, because it meant  that the rest of her life, those  next 17 years-- instead of  harboring bitterness toward her  husband-- she loved him even  more than... In some ways, than  in life, and she was able to  incorporate all of his strengths  into herself.  She had always been the  idealistic one in the  relationship and he was the  practical one.  She always said she was the one  who thought about what should be  done, and he thought about what  could be done. But now, somehow, after he died,  she became partly more like him.  She was a much better politician  after his death than before,  because now she had to be both  of them, not just herself.  So it was an amazing end to this  story.  And it makes you realize, you  know, if you looked at this  story from the outside in, as  the media would probably do  today, they'd accuse him of  infidelity; they might accuse him of harassment for his  relationship with his  secretary, Missy Lehand; maybe  accuse Anna of betrayal of her  mother, and yet none of those  labels would be right.  I mean, I'm absolutely convinced  these people never meant to hurt  one another.  They were simply trying to get  through their lives with the  best possible mixture of love  and respect, through work and affection.  And it seems to me that the  challenge is not to do what's so  prevalent today in biography--to expose and to label and to  stereotype.  What I really wanted to try and  do was to extend empathy; to  understand why they needed all  these relationships, and not to  judge them harshly because of  their own human needs.    
 
LAMB: You have some references to the fact that she went in to  stand by his body at House, she did the same thing, and the ushers kept  everybody out.  How'd you find that out?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  One of the ushers at the  White House, who was there when  she asked him to close the door, was actually inside the room,  and he wrote in a memoir that  he saw that, as she stood by the  body, she opened the casket one  last time so that she could say  good-bye to him, privately, and  he was standing right there, and he wrote it in a memoir.  And so, too, people at Warm Springs wrote memoirs about those last minutes.  Everybody kept somewhat of a  diary during that period of  time, I think knowing how important it would be for later history.    
 
LAMB:   You also include a letter  between Lucy Mercer and Anna.  Where did you get that?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Well, that letter was  actually in Anna's papers at the  FDR Library.    
 
LAMB:  Had that ever been published  before?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  There was one... Johnny Boettiger, Jr., The son of Anna, had written a wonderful little  book about his mother, and his father and his father's death,  and that's the first time I'd ever seen that letter published.  What's so wonderful about the letter is, that after FDR  died, Anna felt so bereft during  that period of time-- because  she thought she'd lost both her  father and her mother-- and at  some point, she called Lucy.  And Lucy then, maybe three or  four weeks after FDR'S death,  Lucy writes back this fabulous letter just saying what that call meant, because she, too, was feeling totally out of it.  Here's this man that she had  loved, had been such a good  friend to her, and she couldn't  even express publicly or openly  anything about their relationship.  She's not part of the funeral, she's just off on her own.  But in that letter, she says to  Anna "I want you to know how  much your father loved you."  And she tells Anna-- it's such  a generous letter-- how many  times Anna's father, FDR, had talked to Lucy about how much he  loved his daughter.  And for a daughter who had lost  her father so much-- to hear that confirmed, I guess, was so  important, that Anna's daughter  told me that Anna kept that  letter in her bedside table for  the rest of her life, because  somehow it confirmed not only  how much her father loved her, but maybe confirmed her not feeling too guilty about  putting Lucy together with her father because it shows what a wonderful woman Lucy was.    
 
LAMB:   Did you ever find yourself getting emotional about any of  this?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: Oh, absolutely.   I mean, not only emotional, but you know, you live with these  characters for six years.  It took me longer to work on  this book, I'm afraid, than the  war to be fought.  That was what was pretty  embarrassing.  I would find myself talking to  Franklin and  Eleanor; talking  to Harry Hopkins and Lorena  Hickok; to Anna, as if they were  still alive.  I mean, you really feel their presence, and when bad things  happen to them; when one of  them hurts one another, you feel  it.  I mean, that's the only way you  can do it, when you get so  absorbed in all of this.    
 
LAMB:   Where'd you write it?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Mostly at home.  I have a study right on the second floor of my house.  We live right on the main street  in Concord, so it's wonderful.  You can walk right into the  town. And I filled the study with  pictures of Franklin and   Eleanor; with pictures of the  war; Rosie the Riveter, and  pictures of the women going to  work in the factories, so that  the ambience felt like world  war, II.  And I got all the books I could  find on this era.  I wanted them with me this time.  I love libraries, and usually  you use libraries a lot, but in  this case, I wanted to be able  to have the books as much  present, so I went to every used  bookstore, and so the whole room  was filled with Roosevelt and  world war, II books. so it was a great place to work.    
 
LAMB:  How do you write?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I fear I write in longhand.  I am so primitive, still.  I cannot think on the  typewriter.  I've never been able to.  So I write it all out in  longhand, and then the worst stage is I, then, copy it all  over, so that a typist can read the writing.  And that's when I edit, when I  copy it all over. And then I gave it to a typist  who would type it up on a computer, and give it back to  me.  And then I didn't really look at  it all until the whole first  draft was done.  And then, finally, at the very  end, when I have to really edit  the thing, we put it all on my  husband's computer, and he  taught me how to actually work  on the computer to edit.  I'm not sure I can still write  on it originally, because I  don't think I can think on it,  but at least I've learned how to  edit on the computer, so I felt  very proud.    
 
LAMB:   What time of day do you  write?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   Usually, I start early in the  morning.  My husband and I both get up  really early.  For some reason, he awakens,  like, at 5:30 or 6:00 in the  morning, so he gets me up to go  have breakfast with him, and  sometimes we work out, if we're  in one of those moods, which  we're not always in, and then we  both start working pretty early,  even sometimes before the kids  go to school at 7:00, and work  until, like, the middle of the afternoon, and then can go play  tennis or go do errands. I mean, that's the fun about  having a husband who's in the  same line of business.  You can take your breaks  together.    
 
LAMB:   Now, when you... The actual  writing you said took six years; the whole research  project and everything else.  How long did it actually take  you to write it?    
Ms. Goodwin: I would guess, of the six  years, probably four of them  were research and two of them  were writing.  And even in the last two years  of writing, I still needed to do  more research.  You'd come upon something and  you wouldn't know the answer to  it, so you'd have to back to  Hyde Park.  So I was probably at the library  there within weeks of finishing  the book.    
LAMB: Your favorite thing in the  book?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I think my favorite thing in  the book is the discovery that Eleanor and Franklin still loved each other, during this period  of time.  The conventional wisdom among historians was, that after the  affair with Lucy Mercer in 1918, their marriage had become a pure  political partnership.  And I was so happy to discover,  even though it meant discovering  that they could still hurt each  other, during this period, that there were still alive emotions.  They're were yearnings.  They kept missing each other. I almost felt like I wanted to  push them together, because I  could feel that love between  them. But I was very glad to find that  out.    
 
LAMB:  You knew Lyndon Johnson.  You wrote a book on him, worked  for him.  Did you know John F. Kennedy?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  No.  I met him once when I was a  girl.  I knew the family pretty well,  but not John F. Kennedy.    
 
LAMB:  Did you know Jacqueline  Kennedy?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: Yes.    
 
LAMB:   And did you... What's the  closest you got to the Roosevelts?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: I guess the closest I got... I never saw Franklin or  Eleanor,  personally.  The closest I got were their two sons, who I interviewed before  they died.  And then all the children of  those children, who were really very helpful to me.   
 
LAMB:  Of the three books, and all the thinking about these politicians, who's your  favorite?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: Well, I think I'll probably  always be most grateful to  Lyndon Johnson, but not for the reasons that you might think.  I think watching him, in those last years of his life, when I  was with him on his ranch  helping him on his memoirs, was  such a searing experience to see  a man who had no other resources  in his life, but politics.  He didn't know how to get  through the days without  politics.  He used to have mock meetings in  the morning to figure out what  to do during the day, and it  would be which cows we're going  to be giving the itch medicine; which tractors were going to be  used that day. He had to have meetings like  he'd had in the White House, but no longer is it bills on the  hill, it's the ranch.  It was almost like a crazy  setting for him.  And at night, he couldn't go to  sleep until he knew how many  people were coming through the  L.B.J. Library.  He wanted more people to go  through that library than were  going through the Kennedy  library.  So, after a while he'd say, "get  them in.  Free doughnuts, free coffee, anything."  But, basically, what I saw was a  man who was so sad that he  couldn't even be alone.  When I'd be down there, he'd ask  me to stay outside his room when  he took a nap.  He would wake me up at 5:30, in  the morning, to talk to him, and  when you're 23 years old, I  think you think that the end of  the most exciting thing in the  world would be to become  president of the United States.  And yet I saw in him somebody  who had not balanced that  success with family, with love,  with friendship, with sports,  with anything else, so that it  left him so bereft, at the end,  that I think the impact it had  on me was to make me know that  success at that price wouldn't  be worth it.  And not long after that  experience of watching him die,  I got married and had children,  and I think one of the reasons  it takes me so long to write these books, is that I wanted to  be with those kids while they  were little.  I didn't want to ever be left, like Lyndon Johnson, with 700  books at the end of my life, but nothing else in it.  So there's no question that that  had such an impact.  When President Carter was  president, he asked me to be  the head of the peace corps, and  it was something I would have  loved to do at some other time,  but the kids were little, and I  just remembered Lyndon Johnson,  and I didn't even feel sad, not  being able to do it, because I  knew the kids would be grown  all too quickly, and I didn't  want to end up that way. So nothing can ever compete with  that, probably.    
 
LAMB:  Where were you born?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  In Rockville Center,  New York.    
 
LAMB:   Rockefeller Center?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   No, not Rockefeller-- Rockville Center.    
 
LAMB:  Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't  hear...    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  No, that's okay.  My family originally came from Brooklyn, and then moved out to Long Island, and that's why I was a huge baseball fan.  My real love of history started  with baseball, because my father  taught me to keep score when I  was seven years old, and somehow  I would recreate the games for  him when he came home from  work-- the Brooklyn Dodger  games-- and I thought without me  he'd never know what happened to  the Brooklyn dodgers, because he  never told me all the scores  were in the newspaper the next  day.  So I was so proud of what I was  doing every day, and that's  probably where I started to love history.    
 
LAMB:  Where did you go to college?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I went to Colby College, in  Maine, and then I went to  Harvard graduate school, and got  a Ph.D. In government at  Harvard.    
 
LAMB:  What was your thesis on?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: My thesis was in  constitutional law, actually.  It was on two attempts to  overturn supreme court  decisions-- Dirksen, on the  prayer in the schools; and the  one man-one vote decision-- and  in both cases, the amendments  failed.    
 
LAMB:  Going to write another book?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Oh, sure.  What else can I do?  My husband and I are actually  going to work on a book  together, which may be a disaster.  I remember interviewing  President Carter once, and he said the biggest mistake he made  was working on a book with his wife Rosalynn.  They almost got divorced.  But we're going to do a book  together on presidential  decisions, and take about 15 decisions, like Truman firing Macarthur; and Lincoln at Fort Sumter; Johnson getting civil rights through the Congress.  Each one will illustrate a  different power of the presidency, and each one will be  told as a story.  I want each one to be a dramatic  moment in that president's life,  so that a young person reading  it, like in college, would get a  history of the presidency, but  through these great decisions.  So I'm hoping they'll love  history as much as we do. 
 
LAMB: What do your kids think of  all this?    
 
Ms. Goodwin: Well, you know the  interesting thing is, because we've been home so much of the  time when we work, they haven't really seen the end results,  until now, as teenagers.  They see this book out.  They see their father in the  "quiz show" movie, as being  played as the 27-year-old.  One of them came out of the movie said, "dad, you're a  stallion again"-- you know,  somehow that sense of pride.  So that it isn't like a career  where they're confronting daily  who they're parents are.  We've been much more quiet and  at home.  I do television at home, so people are much more aware,  because I do local commentary  for our ABC affiliate in Boston,  and do a weekly television show, which I've done for 12 years.  When we go on the streets,  people will know me from that,  so the kids are sort of queazy  about getting stopped all the  time.  But as far as the writing goes, it's been the most fabulous  thing to combine with family  life, because we're home almost  all the time.    
 
LAMB:  We haven't got much time,  but, you know, when you go up to  FDR'S home and you see the  library and the home, and then Val-kill-- which is a couple of  miles away-- where  Eleanor Roosevelt spent a lot of her  time, what was your thoughts about... What kind of a family feeling would that have been-- she over there, and him over at  the other place?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  And the thing that's so  striking in seeing the two  separate places is how different  they are.  The big house of Sara and  Franklin's is so perfectly put  together.  The china all matches.  All the furniture is gorgeous.   Eleanor's house has all  mixed-matched china.  Every chair in the living room is a different size, so that a  fat person and a tall person and a thin person and a short  person would be comfortable in  the chairs.  You know how opposite their  temperaments were.  She was a much more... She liked  to make people feel at ease, and he loved the elegance, I think,  of that first place.  So, in some ways, they were  never meant for each other, but thank God for the country, and  for themselves, these opposite  temperaments attracted when they  were young, and had enough to  keep them going through this  long marriage.    
 
LAMB:   I know we... This is not  fair, with a minute to go, but how about the relationship  between her women friends at Val-kill?  A lot's been written about that.  What do you think the  relationship was?    
 
Ms. Goodwin:   I think it's mostly a  relationship where Eleanor was loved by somebody, particularly Lorena Hickok.  For the first time, she felt the  center of somebody else's life.  I know some people have claimed that that means that maybe she  was a lesbian, as this woman, Lorena Hickock was.  I don't think that's necessarily  so.  I think the most important thing to understand is that this woman  loved her, and she loved her,  and helped her to become a  better first lady.  The truth is, historians don't  know whether they went beyond  hugs and kisses, and sometimes  people try to appropriate Eleanor, one way or the other.  But I think  Eleanor would be the  first person-- if she came back  today, and knew that if she were  considered a lesbian and it  gave a role model to younger  people, making them feel better  about themselves, she'd probably  be the first to say "that's fine," but I don't think she  would have ever defined herself that way.    
 
LAMB:   "No Ordinary Time" is the  title of this book.  It's about the warriors on the  homefront, with FDR and Eleanor Roosevelt.  Here you have Doris Kearns Goodwin.  Thank you very much.    
 
Ms. Goodwin:  Oh, you're so welcome.
 
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