"Much more than biography and much less than hagiography, this book has much to say about Progressive Era public policy formation, corporate liberalism, industrial democracy, economic nationalism, and political isolationism."—American Historical Review
"Clements has written a remarkably well balanced and perceptive history of an administration that has had both staunch defenders and harsh critics."—Journal of Southern History
"Clements’s understanding of Wilson and his presidency, along with the lengthy critical bibliography, make this book a superb introduction to the Wilson Administration."—Reviews in American History
"This is simply a superb book, one based on a mastery of the secondary works and wide reading in the primary sources. The chapters on the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Labor are significant contributions to our knowledge of the Wilson presidency, and the author’s admiration of Woodrow Wilson does not get in the way of his critical appraisal of the man and his career in the presidency."—Arthur S. Link, Editor and Director, The Papers of Woodrow Wilson
"This is the best one-volume history of the full Wilson presidency."—John Whiteclay Chambers II, author of The Tyranny of Change: America in the Progressive Era, 1890–1920
"I know of no better examination of what a presidential administration actually did-desired, planned, accomplished, failed to do, and unintentionally caused or influenced. This is the best single book on the Wilson administration and one of a handful of best books on any presidency."—John Milton Cooper, Jr., author of Pivotal Decades: The United States, 1900–1920 and The Warrior and the Priest: Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt
"Clements probes beneath Wilson’s popular, post-Versailles image to show us the greatest legislative leader of the twentieth century."—Richard Norton Smith, Director, Herbert Hoover Library