Every Man a King (1933) is an autobiography by Huey Long, who served as the 40th governor of Louisiana and as a member of the United States Senate.
[1] Long's posthumously published My First Days in the White House is sometimes referred to as his "second autobiography".
The New York Times Book Review claimed "There is hardly a law of English usage or a rule of English grammar that its author does not break somewhere."
In the Saturday Review, Allan Nevins wrote that Long "is unbalanced, vulgar, in many ways ignorant, and quite reckless."
[3] This article about a biographical or autobiographical book on an American politician is a stub.