"Payne's reappraisal of the Harding myth is first-rank scholarship and makes an impressive contribution to the debates about the life and misfortunes of Warren Harding. Summing Up: Essential." (Choice) "Payne gives the reader much to consider and convincingly makes the case that Harding has remained relevant until today because he has become the benchmark by which other presidential failings are assessed, concluding that 'Harding continues to hover at the edge of our national memory, where he is rediscovered when[ever] one of our leaders fails'." (American Historical Review) "More so than previous historians, Phillip Payne has presented a much more nuanced understanding of Harding's political legacies. His well-structured narrative leaves Harding's memory in the same place as his monument: balancing multiple eras, designs, and interpretations, and ultimately, left to future generations to evaluate fully." (Northwest Ohio History) "This examination, Payne's comparisons to more recent presidents, and his examination of the use of the race card in politics help expand the scholarship in a number of fields, including history, political science, and sociology." (The Journal of American History) "(A) fascinating exploration of the man's reputation in his own time and of how we have continued to play upon Harding's reputation over the years since then. Payne's concluding chapter on the smug (my word) presidential ratings by historians, and of the continued convenience of using Harding to this day as an example of failure is a fascinating one." (Library Journal) "Phillip Payne's Dead Last accomplishes a task for which historians of political thought will be very grateful: his assessment of Harding's ideology of 'civic boosterism' in the 1920s is truly insightful and original." "(I)t took more than scandal to sink Harding to the bottom of the presidential pile. (Payne) says, for example, that the very qualities that got Harding elected in 1920, such as his boosterism for small-town America, turned against him after his death." (Mansfield News Journal)