Teasing has almost entirely negative connotations these days. Yet teasing has in fact long functioned to bring people together.| The Art of Manliness
What did Theodore Roosevelt read and enjoy? Check out this list of recommendations he made to a friend, full of classic literature, Greek tragedy, and modern fiction.| The Art of Manliness
Excerpted from "The Powers of a Strenuous President" from The American Magazine, 1908.| The Art of Manliness
In the first year of his presidency, the press used Theodore Roosvelt's name in connection with the word "strenuous" over 10,000 times.| The Art of Manliness
If you’ve been following The Art of Manliness for awhile, you know we’re big fans of Theodore Roosevelt. The man embodied the Strenuous Life. He was a rancher, a soldier, a hunter, a statesman, and a practitioner of boxing and judo. But what many people don’t know about Roosevelt was that he was also an […]| The Art of Manliness
This article series is now available as a professionally formatted, distraction free ebook to read offline at your leisure. Click here to buy. Welcome back to our series on The Spartan Way, which seeks to illuminate the lessons the ancient Spartans can teach modern men – not in their details, but in the general principles that lie beneath, and can still […]| The Art of Manliness
Before the end, they would face every imaginable peril, and the Bull Moose himself, who had defied death on so many occasions, would come face to face with his mortality.| The Art of Manliness
An excerpt from an address that President Teddy Roosevelt gave in San Bernadino, California in 1903.| The Art of Manliness