Your Presidential Fantasy Dream Team

Your Presidential Fantasy Dream Team

Your Presidential Fantasy Dream Team

Your Presidential Fantasy Dream Team

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Overview

Draft your own presidential fantasy team, based on these hilarious-but-true profiles of our past leaders, in this fun and funny illustrated book perfect for fans of How They Croaked: The Awful Ends of the Awfully Famous and Kid Presidents!
 
What if a zombie apocalypse or a robot uprising threatened the nation and you had the power to recruit some of the nation’s finest presidents to help save the day?
 
By studying the most successful squads in history, Daniel O’Brien has identified the perfect ingredients for a victorious team.
 
Which president would you choose for: the Brain, the Brawn, the Moral Compass, the Loose Cannon, and the Roosevelt?
 
Choose wisely—the fate of the world is in your hands!

"Aiming squarely at a sports-obsessed, statistics-mad and gross-out friendly audience, the madcap, utterly irreverent Your Presidential Fantasy Dream Team may be on to something." —New York Times

"O'Brien takes a non-holds-barred approach to describing each man's strengths, weaknesses, and reputation . . . Rowntree's over-the-top illustrations picture ratchet up the humor even more." —PW

"A warts-and-all look at two centuries of presidential leadership and politics." —Kirkus Reviews


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780553537475
Publisher: Random House Children's Books
Publication date: 06/28/2016
Pages: 272
Sales rank: 653,610
Product dimensions: 6.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)
Lexile: NC1250L (what's this?)
Age Range: 10 - 14 Years

About the Author

Daniel O’Brien is the head writer and creative director of video for Cracked.com, the most-viewed comedy website on the Internet. His work has been featured on Comedy Central and in Splitsider, Forbes, USA Today, and Huffington Post. Daniel is also the co-editor of You Might Be a Zombie and Other Bad News, a New York Times bestseller, and is the pop culture expert on History Channel’s Your Bleeped Up Brain. When Daniel isn’t researching wacky trivia on our presidents, he can be found playing with his dog, Jackson, who is named after a president. Your Presidential Fantasy Dream Team is his first book for young readers.
 
Winston Rowntree is a columnist at Cracked.com and the author of the webcomic Subnormality. He recently won the Cartoonist Studio Prize for Best Web Comic of the Year for his comic Watching. His background in comics and interest in history inspired Winston to put an amusing and sometimes weird twist on the illustrations for each president. This is his first book for young readers.

Read an Excerpt

George Washington
 
 
The President of Presidents
 
 
Presidential Term: 1789–1797
 
Political Party: None
 
Spouse: Martha Dandridge
 
Children: None, though he’s technically the Father of His Country, so . . . lots?
 
Birthdate: February 22, 1732
 
Death Date: December 14, 1799
 
Fun Fact: Washington is literally on money.
 
 
 
There are two kinds of people in this world: people who don’t actively enjoy being shot at, and George Washington. Most of you are probably in that first group, and that’s why no one will ever put your picture on money.
 
The idea that Washington liked being shot at isn’t up for debate, mind you. No one is saying that Washington probably enjoyed being shot at because of his willingness to return to battle in service of his country; he admitted to it. In a letter to his brother about his time on the battlefield, Washington said, “I heard the bullets whistle, and, believe me, there is something charming in the sound,” which, according to rumor, prompted King George III to remark that Washington’s attitude would change if he’d heard a few more. “Oh ho ho, perhaps you’re right,” Washington may have said good-naturedly with a chuckle, before he absolutely destroyed King George’s entire army and ran America for eight glorious and strong-jawed years.
 
But we know all that already. We all know how tough and noble Washington was. If you studied Washington at all in school, you know that he was a good man and a just president, a friend to everyone and everything (with the notable exception, according to some rumors, of cherry trees). We know all of this because everyone talks about how bright, strong, and fair President George Washington was. But I’m going to talk about how he was also probably magic.
 
Let’s start with how Washington knew America was going to war before America even had an army. Sure, the seeds of discontent had already been sown, but war was not a foregone conclusion to anyone but Washington even in 1775, when the Continental Congress met for the second time to discuss what to do about Great Britain’s unfair taxation practices. War was an option, but not a certainty at that point, at least not in the eyes of the members of the Continental Congress. Many of the Founding Fathers, like Benjamin Franklin, still had great fondness for their mother country, and they were eager to find a peaceful solution with the homeland.
 
But not Washington. Whether he could see the future and knew war was coming or he simply willed the war into existence, Washington was ahead of the curve. On his way to the meeting (before war had been declared—or even discussed—and before he’d been given command of the Continental Army), he stopped off to buy some books about war strategy, tomahawks, and new holsters for his guns. If that didn’t send a clear-enough message, he showed up to the meeting already wearing his military uniform, while the rest of the representatives were trying to handle this whole “revolution thing” delicately and diplomatically. It was like everyone else at the meeting was discussing whether or not they should build a bomb, and Washington had already lit the fuse. It wasn’t just about finding another chance to challenge a bunch of bullets to a game of chicken (though it’s true Washington never missed an opportunity to do so). He knew war was inevitable and wanted to be dressed appropriately.
 
And of course, Washington was right. War was necessary. Even if it wasn’t necessary before, it was necessary because he said it was. For reasons that will never be clear to historians (but will be to people who accept magic as a possibility), the universe bends to Washington’s will.
 
Here’s one of the most important things you need to know about Washington: he should not have been able to lead America to victory in the Revolutionary War. When it came time to choose someone to command the Continental Army, Washington was chosen for his popularity, not his skills as a general. He was brave and a great soldier, but he’d never commanded anything larger than a regiment, and when he’d been handed an entire army of untrained, undisciplined troops, he started messing up almost immediately. He lost more battles than he won, and the majority of those losses were a direct result of his own arrogance and overaggressiveness. Yes, Washington—the man we all like to remember as the quiet, dignified, reluctant soldier—was a short-tempered fighter who never turned down a battle. If you think that never turning down a battle despite your army being terrible and untrained is a bad strategy, congratulations, you’d make a better general than George Washington. (Feel free to brag to all your friends.)
 
Unlike most soldiers (and, indeed, most sane human beings), Washington didn’t see a battle as a means to an end, or as an unfortunate but necessary part of achieving important goals. He saw it as a chance to show his enemies how brave and strong he and his army were. He’d treat every challenge from his opponents not like a necessary evil that needed to be stopped as quickly as possible, but like a personal attack on him, as if the opposing army were just pointing at Washington and bawking like a chicken. After being called a chicken, instead of calmly using the timeless and brilliant “I’m rubber and you’re glue” strategy, Washington overreacted and sent his exhausted and unskilled army after every insult. In case you’ve never led an army before, you should know that this is a bad strategy, especially when your opponent is stronger, larger, and more experienced, as Great Britain was.
 
This overaggressive strategy blew up in Washington’s face over and over again. At many times during the war, it seemed that America’s favorite son was too arrogant and reckless to bring us to victory. Indeed, Washington rarely won battles; he mostly just survived using “strategic retreat.” If that sounds like a fancy, classy way of saying “running away,” that’s because it is.
 

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