The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President by Taylor Branch

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2009
  • 720pp
  • Sales Rank: 1,599
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2009
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 720pp
    • Sales Rank: 1,599

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    A cross between Woody Allen's Zelig and Tom Hanks's Forrest Gump, MacArthur "Genius Grant" recipient and Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Taylor Branch pops up everywhere in Bill Clinton's presidency. An old friend from the 1970s (he, Bill, and Hill shared an apartment when they all worked on George McGovern's presidential campaign in Texas), Branch is pressed into service as a chronicler of events to aid the president with his eventual memoir writing. Branch helps out at the inaugural, offering phrases and rewriting sentences for The Speech, even though he doesn't even have a seat at the actual event (he's reduced to squatting in the aisle). Then he, Hillary, and Bill all walk into the White House together. When Clinton realizes that Branch knows Aristide, the deposed leader of Haiti, he uses Branch as a go-between to get a pledge that if Aristide is restored to power, he'll not try to extend his term of office (later Branch tags along when U.S. forces do restore the Haitian president). Clinton also sounds Branch out on Cabinet appointments and on policy, and uses him as a go-between during a baseball strike.

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    Synopsis

    A sitting president thinks out loud about his legacy to his close friend, a Pulitzer Prize winning historian, over seven sometimes turbulent years.

    The New York Times Book Review - Joe Klein

    …[an] odd, revealing and often delightful book…[that] will stand as an important work about American political life because of two dominant themes that emerge gradually—one about the man himself and the other about the nature of the current era…The Bill Clinton who emerges here is a master practitioner of an art that is routinely derided—foolishly—these days: he's an unabashed, unapologetic politician. To the extent that Branch's portrait of the president rescues politics from ignominy, he has done a real public service; that he has done this while vividly portraying an exuberant American original is cause for joy.

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    Biography

    Taylor Branch is an author and historian perhaps best known for his acclaimed trilogy of books chronicling the life and accomplishments of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the arc of the American civil rights movement. "I would like my readers to entertain the core notion that civil rights history is not a quaint tale of yesteryear, but rather our best model for the urgent task of understanding and refining democracy," he reflects in our interview.

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