Introduction

In his '50s, after leaving the White House, President Theodore Roosevelt was faced with the opportunity to explore the Amazon in South America. The journey down the appropriately named River of Doubt (now Rio Roosevelt) was a prospect that was fraught with danger and almost killed his son Kermit. This was a time when the twenty-sixth U.S. president could have basked in the glory of his past achievements, writing his memoirs and putting his presidential library in order. A careful and calculating decision maker might have weighed the risks against the opportunity and wisely decided to stay at home. Roosevelt was not that kind of man. You can almost hear him responding enthusiastically with a single word: "Bully!" He said the trip ...

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