War in a Time of Peace: Bush, Clinton, and the Generals by David Halberstam (Read by), James Naughton (Read by)

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(Audio - Bargain)

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  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
  • Pub. Date: September 1901
  • ISBN-13: 9780641706479
  • Sales Rank: 39,758
  • Edition Description: Bargain

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Synopsis

Pulitzer Prize­winning journalist David Halberstam chronicles Washington politics and foreign policy in post­Cold War America.

Book Magazine

Bill Clinton, who wasn't particularly interested in foreign affairs and effortlessly persuaded the voters that it didn't matter, ended up spending much of his presidency grappling with three of the most intractable foreign-policy crises of the '90s: ethnic warfare in the Balkans, violent chaos in Africa and a bloody stalemate in the Middle East. As historical ironies go, that's a doozy. But Halberstam's book doesn't quite rise to the occasion, though it is full of interesting things (such as the acute observation that by cutting back on their foreign-news coverage in the '80s, the TV networks became "essentially isolationist, or neo-isolationist, both reflecting and at the same time increasing the nation's self-absorption"). That's part of the problem—it's too full. This is the sort of book that publicists call "epic," meaning that it wanders all over the place and trails off inconclusively at the end. As for the smoothly portentous drone of Halberstam's Pulitzer Prize-winning prose style, suffice it to say that the book would be a lot more readable if it contained fewer sentences like "Events, George Ball wrote in one of his dove papers on Vietnam just before the fateful commitment of American combat troops, quoting from Emerson, are in the saddle and ride mankind." Doesn't anybody edit manuscripts anymore?
—Terry Teachout

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Biography

One of the most popular and imitated nonfiction writers around, David Halberstam wrote books that fused narrative storytelling with investigative reporting. The result: stories that hummed with energy and authority and reads as well as -- if not better than -- some novels.

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Customer Reviews

Great Look at the foreign policy of 1990sby AndrewP

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December 03, 2008: Published in 2001, this book takes a look at the foreign policy of the 1990s. The decade is defined by Halberstam as a time period of war in a time of peace. Halberstam writes in vignettes that give you a great glimpse of all the major foreign policy players during President Bush 41 and President Clinton?s administrations. Halberstam writes as a true journalist, someone who investigates a topic and presents the reality of what happened. There is little opportunity to see this author?s opinion until the epilogue which Halberstam added as a post-script to 9/11 in 2002. This is a must read for anyone interested in foreign policy and provides excellent insight into President?s Clinton?s challenges as a leader. Halberstam?s grasp of the political process and his ability to display just how difficult and confusing it is to be Commander in Chief of this great country make for an incredibly informed and yet entertaining read.

cogent, and necessary critical review of Presidents and military.by Anonymous

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June 21, 2006: This analysis of policies of George H.W. Bush and William J. (Bill) Clinton offers a cogent, critical, where necessary, analysis of these Presidents and their foreign policies. It also offers an analysis of the shortcomings of both men, in domestic, as well as foreign relations. It shows the strengths and weaknesses of Bush and Clinton. Bush, the economy, which may have cost him the election. Clinton, foreign policy and a military diminished by cuts, to promote the domestic agenda, which, some might feel made us more vulnerable. It's well read and gives a fairly detailed analysis in a short space of time [refers to abridged audio cassette]. Worth listening to, and makes me wonder if Mr. Halberstam would write an analysis of the current Bush's policies [or perhaps, lack of policies, save to tick off (to put it politely) those who'd seek America's downfall, e.g., radical Islamists, North Korea, Iran, and others, what he'd make of it. Let's hope he does.


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