The Right Man by David Frum

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  • Pub. Date: January 2003
  • 320pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2003
    • Publisher: Random House, Incorporated
    • Format: Hardcover, 320pp

    Synopsis

    The Right Man is the first inside account of a historic year in the Bush White House, by the presidential speechwriter credited with the phrase axis of evil. David Frum helped make international headlines when President George W.

    Publishers Weekly

    Frum, author of Dead Right and the phrase "axis of evil," looks back on a year as a speechwriter in the Bush White House in this affable and witty but slightly cagey account. Frum recounts the travails of crafting the President's public pronouncements and the ordeal of the terrorist attacks, and draws funny thumbnail sketches of White House personalities like communications director Karen Hughes, who "disliked verbs" because they "conveyed action, not feeling." Mostly, though, he keeps the focus on Bush, vigorously disputing the notion that the President is a dim-witted figurehead for powerful advisors like Dick Cheney and Karl Rove and insisting that Bush is a commanding leader who came into his own after 9/11. But he also describes the president as "ill informed" and "sometimes glib, even dogmatic," with "a poor memory for facts and figures"; his strengths are "tenacity," "courage," a "large and clear" vision and a "Holden Caulfield streak" of sincerity. Frum was not part of the inner circle, so his evidence for Bush's leadership sometimes consists of the bold statements Bush made in speeches that were crafted by others to explain policies hashed out by his subordinates. His sketchy defense of Bush's policy-making is similarly unconvincing; concerns about the energy industry's influence on the plan to drill in Alaska are dismissed as "goofy," and his recap of the Bush tax cut doesn't answer the main criticism that it is skewed toward the rich. Frum is an engaging writer, but this is very much a speechwriter's book-packed with graceful sound bites, but ultimately more spin than substance. (Jan.) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.

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    Customer Reviews

    Right Manby Anonymous

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    October 10, 2004: I was very suprised by this book. I read it because I had heard a recommendation, but approached it with a degree of skepticism. I didn't want to read a 280 page 'rah-rah' Bush pep rally. I was pleasantly suprised with how well Mr. Frum covered events as they happened and recorded them in a fashion that produced an easy to read manuscript. This book did a fantastic job of recounting the perspectives of one Presidential speechwriter, and how he viewed our President's handling of crises. I highly recommend this book.

    Right Manby Anonymous

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    June 15, 2003: George W is destined to be revisited time and again, the way Harry Truman is.... they are both independent thinkers who know right from wrong, call a spade a spade, get the info they need , then march straight ahead. Buy this book, and also buy an unadvertised gem called 'Cockpit Confessions of an Airline Pilot,' by Keshner.


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