|

Some
Key LDS Biographies for Your Home Library
by
Richard H. Cracroft
The
stories of Latter-day Saint leaders are the fabric of the Mormon
faith, and, when interwoven, become the warp and woof of Mormon
history.
Here I go again,
blithely sticking out my stiff neck once more to suggest, this month,
a handful of LDS biographies about church presidents and General
Authorities which you might want to add to your home libraries.
If you feel I've made egregious omissions (in other words, if my
stiff neck has irritated your thin skin), e-mail any suggestionsas
some of you were kind enough to do about last month's list of works
by and about the Prophet Joseph Smith. I also welcome suggestions
for the December column as to which books you consider to be the
best in LDS Church history. My address: classicscorner@meridianmagazine.com
The stories
of Latter-day Saint leaders are the fabric of the Mormon faith,
and, when interwoven, become the warp and woof of Mormon history.
Paraphrasing Thomas Carlyle, I might suggest, then, that Mormon
history is the lengthened shadow of Mormon biographies, greater
and lesser, of which Joseph Smith's story was the first.
The first Mormon
biography, Lucy Mack Smith's The History of Joseph Smith, by His
Mother, has now been newly issued and revised by George A. Smith
and Elias Smith (American Fork, UT: Covenant Communications, 2000);
and, in another edition, Revised and Enhanced History of Joseph
Smith by His Mother (Salt Lake City, UT: Bookcraft, 1996) edited
by Scot and Maurine Proctor. The latter is a revision which uses
her original notes as the basis and adds 600 footnotes and 150 pictures
to add context to the manuscript. As noted last month, there are
numerous biographies of Joseph Smith, Jr., who still awaits a definitive
biography. In my opinion, the best biography of the Prophet for
your home library is Donna Hill's Joseph Smith: The First Mormon
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1977).
There are, as
you might suspect, biographies of every Church president and some
(but not all) counselors in the First Presidency (especially J.
Reuben Clark, about whom Frank Fox and D. Michael Quinn have written
so well in J. Reuben Clark:The Public Years (1980) and J. Reuben
Clark: The Church Years (1983), respectivelyand respectfully);
and about many of the General Authorities. The problem in biographies
about church leaders is that they are often uneven and subjective,
written as worshipful and aggrandizing hagiography (writing the
lives of the saints) for popular audiences at the expense of careful
research and objectivity.
A good collective
biography for your library is Leonard J. Arrington's The Presidents
of the Church (Deseret Book, 1980), which provides excellent, brief
accounts of the lives of LDS presidents from Joseph Smith through
Spencer W. Kimball.
Brigham Young
has been the subject of many biographies. The best is Leonard J.
Arrington's classic and definitive study, Brigham Young: American
Moses (New York: Knopf, 1985)-which should be in every library.
Two briefer biographies are Eugene England's outstanding Brother
Brigham (Bookcraft, 1980) and Susan Evans McCloud's more recent
Brigham Young: A Personal Portrait (Covenant Communications, 1996).
Right now, I am thoroughly enjoying Brigham Young: Images of a Mormon
Prophet (Eagle Gate and BYU Religious Studies Center, 2000), a fascinating
pictorial biography by Richard Neitzel Holzapfel and R.Q. Shupe.
Each of the
presidents of the Church has been the subject of several biographies,
of varying quality. A home library could boast a biography about
each. Francis M. Gibbons has written, for example, useful outlines
of the lives of Heber J. Grant (1979) and George Albert Smith (1990);
and Richard Neitzel Holzapfel and R.Q. Shupe's recent Joseph F.
Smith: Portrait of a Prophet (Deseret Book, 2000) presents the human
side of the sixth president of the church; Merlo J. Pusey's Builders
of the Kingdom: George A. Smith, John Henry Smith, and George Albert
Smith (BYU Press, 1981) treats three generations of Mormon leaders
from one family.
Useful biographies
of recent presidents are David Lawrence McKay's My Father: David
O. McKay (Deseret Book, 1989); The Life of Joseph Fielding Smith
(Deseret Book, 1972), by Joseph Fielding Smith, Jr. and John J.
Stewart; L. Brent Goates's Harold B. Lee: Prophet and Seer (Bookcraft,
1985); Sheri L. Dew's Ezra Taft Benson: A Biography (Deseret Book,
1987); and Eleanor Knowles's Howard W. Hunter (Deseret Book, 1994).
Alas, for choosing
a few books for our libraries, there are a number of outstanding
biographies about everyone from Hyrum Smith, Emma Hales Smith, Sidney
Rigdon, and Heber C. Kimball, to the Prophet's sons, Joseph Smith
III and David Smith; and about a host of Mormon leaders from John
Taylor and Lorenzo Snow to Bishop Edwin D. Woolley, Rudger Clawson,
and Nathan Eldon Tanner-and they keep on coming! I have these books
in my library and enjoy, in particular, Truman G. Madsen's Defender
of the Faith: The B.H. Roberts Story (Bookcraft, 1980); and Eugene
E. Campbell and Richard D. Poll's Hugh B. Brown: His Life and Thought
(Bookcraft, 1975). But . . . I enjoy most of them, because I enjoy
biographies more than fiction.
Nevertheless,
in addition to Hill's Joseph Smith: The First Mormon and Arrington's
Brigham Young: American Moses, I would recommend four exceptional
biographies for your libraries:
- Thomas G.
Alexander, in Things in Heaven and Earth: The Life and Times of
Wilford Woodruff, a Mormon Prophet (Signature Books, 1991), does
a remarkable job of placing President Woodruff in the context
of his times. An enlightening read that sticks to one's ribs.
- Edward L.
Kimball and Andrew W. Kimball, in Spencer W. Kimball (Bookcraft,
1977), raised the standard of Mormon biography to a new high in
this classic book, which concludes in April, 1977-a year before
the revelation on granting the priesthood to all worthy men. I
understand that Edward Kimball is writing a long-anticipated second
volume.
- Davis Bitton,
in George Q. Cannon: A Biography (Deseret Book, 1999), thoroughly
chronicles the too-little known yet vastly influential life of
this Apostle and counselor to four presidents. Cannon was to19th
Century Mormonism what Gordon B. Hinckley has been to 20th Century
Mormonism. This is another great read.
- Sheri L.
Dew, in Go Forward With Faith: The Biography of Gordon B. Hinckley
(Deseret Book, 1999), has written an instant classic about a classic
individual who, since about 1935, has been a part of virtually
every major event or decision in Mormondom. Everyone should own
and read this book.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|