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I must confess that sometime before I read Chris Matthews' book idespised Richard Nixon. But, after reading his book I feel a certain sympathy for the man. Fairly balanced Matthews shows us a man(Nixon)who may have been one of the greater presidents had his paranoia not gotten the better of him. However, as Matthews points out Nixon's paranoia wasn't created by him but by his enemies. Whom I'm...
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I was riveted by this book; found it a real page turner! I felt that Mr. Matthews fairly portrayed Nixon, not covering up the path of paranoia that ultimately led to his demise, but honestly exposing all of the shaded elements that formed his political life. While Nixon may not be forgiven for the actions he choose, I found it fascinating to be led by such capable words through the maze that led him...
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Like all of Chris Matthews books, this book reads quickly, precisely, and with a hint of Irish storytelling that Matthews himself has noted as being something he admired. Besides, this quickly told story, it is also engrossing and one can spend an evening by the fire reading the history of our most ambiguous and profound relationship in political history. That between John Kennedy and Nixon. Both...
John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon each dreamed of becoming the great young leader of their age. First as friends, then as bitter enemies, they were linked by a historic rivalry that changed both them and their country. In this startling dual portrait, Chris Matthews shows how the contest between the charismatic Kennedy and the talented yet haunted Nixon propelled America toward Vietnam and Watergate. Fresh, entertaining, and revealing, Kennedy and Nixon shows how the early fondness between the two men—Kennedy, for example, told a trusted friend that if he didn’t receive the Democratic nomination in 1960, he would vote for Nixon—degenerated into distrust and bitterness. Using White House tapes, this book shows how Richard Nixon’s dread of a Kennedy “restoration” in 1972 drove the dark deeds of Watergate.
Wartime naval officers John Kennedy and Richard Nixon entered politics in the congressional class of 1947 and remained friendly thereafter. Until ambition and party identity began to pull them apart, they even shared a Cold War conservatism and middle-of-the-road domestic agenda. Yet Kennedy would remark after his narrow presidential victory in 1960, "If I've done nothing [else] for this country, I've saved them from Dick Nixon." Because Kennedy had his father's fortune as well as his father's ruthlessness, he was able to hold his own in the national arena after Nixon's own opportunism got him (during Eisenhower's illnesses) within a heartbeat of the White House. Additional Kennedy advantages were his authentic hero status and a reputation for braininess gained from his book Profiles in Courage. Washington cable news anchor Matthews (Hardball: How Politics Is Played) has described the largely familiar parallels between the political careers of the two electoral rivals and added some striking ones of his own. Nixon, he contends, was handicapped by resentment of Kennedy's affluence and easy elegance, struggling clumsily once in office to match what he saw as his presidential style. Running against the graceful ghost of one Kennedy, he found himself, in 1968, competing against the shade of a second martyred Kennedy, then against the inheritance of the Last Brother-whose ambitions he sought to sidetrack by means of the bunglers of Watergate. Haunted by the Kennedys, Nixon recklessly undermined his own presidency. To Matthews, the "Camelot" aura is as much a misperception as the idea that Watergate represents the real Nixon. Despite a straining for balance and a tendency to oversimplify to fit the tale to the theme, it is a good story. Illustrations not seen by PW. (June)
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