(BookTrib)
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Presidential history can sound like something that belongs in a classroom, a documentary or a very large book you keep meaning to read someday. But Ronald Gruner’s We the Presidents makes a compelling case that the presidents of the past are not really past at all. Their decisions are still shaping the country we live in now.
Published in a new anniversary edition on July 4, 2026, to commemorate the 250th anniversary of American Independence, We the Presidents looks at a full century of American leadership, from Warren G. Harding to Donald J. Trump. But this is not a standard march through presidential biographies. Gruner is less interested in personality, party labels or political theater than in consequences. What did these presidents actually do? What problems did they inherit? Which decisions echoed far beyond their term in office?
Many of the issues dominating today’s headlines — immigration, inflation, income disparity, civil discord, war and the expanding power of the executive branch — did not appear overnight. Gruner traces their roots across administrations, showing how one presidency often sets the stage for the next. In his telling, American history becomes less a series of isolated chapters and more a long chain of choices, reactions — and sometimes, unintended consequences.
Gruner brings an unusual perspective to the subject. Before turning to history, he spent 40 years as a business leader, founding and serving as chief executive of three successful technology firms. That background informs the book’s results-oriented lens. He writes with an eye toward outcomes: what worked, what failed and what changed the country in ways Americans are still living with today.
The book is also designed for readers who may be tired of the usual partisan framing. We the Presidents examines presidential decisions without leaning on labels like Democrat, Republican, liberal or conservative. The result is a clear-eyed history that invites readers to think beyond team politics and look instead at leadership, policy and impact.
It helps, too, that the book is built to be accessible. With more than 140 images and charts, many in color, the anniversary edition gives visual context to a century of change. Reviewers have praised the book as “essential reading for every conscientious citizen” and “a compelling education on the issues which have shaped the American century up to the present day.”
That may be the real promise of We the Presidents: not simply that it teaches us what happened, but that it helps us understand why the present looks the way it does. At a time when public conversation often feels loud, fractured and impatient, Gruner offers something more durable — historical perspective.
For readers who want to better understand America’s current divisions, the growth of presidential power and the long shadow of executive decisions, We the Presidents is a timely and thought-provoking guide. It reminds us that every president inherits a country shaped by those who came before — and leaves behind a country the next one must answer for.
Purchase at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H2KFD1SY/ or learn more at https://wethepresidents.us/.