Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Pamela H. Hansen. By Shadow Mountain.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $4.86.
There are some available for $1.89.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Running With Angels: The Inspiring Journey of a Woman Who Turned Personal Tragedy into Triumph Over Obesity.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Blanche Caldwell Barrow. By University of Oklahoma Press.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $11.79.
There are some available for $10.25.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about My Life With Bonnie And Clyde.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Jan Wong. By Anchor.
The regular list price is $15.95.
Sells new for $8.24.
There are some available for $2.50.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Red China Blues: My Long March From Mao to Now.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Peggy Noonan. By Random House Trade Paperbacks.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $5.75.
There are some available for $1.82.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about What I Saw at the Revolution: A Political Life in the Reagan Era.
- She's witty, intelligent, well-read, has down-home common sense, loves the Gipper. What's not to like? She tells great stories of a unique historic moment. She does not brag, has no axe to grind. Many beautiful sentences. One of America's great writers and thinkers. Don't miss her editorial essays in the Wall St. Journal on Saturdays. (Would someone please collect all of them, every word, into a book? Ala David Sedaris? PS - Reading DS leaves me amused, but feeling slightly creepier than I was before. PN leaves you sure that the world can and will be a better place.)
I listened to the Audible recording, which I believe is her reading her own book. It adds a lot to have her read it. But ... Audible does not bother to identify the reader. It sounds like Audible recorded their version from a $19 cassette recorder, using a $9.95 microphone. You have to turn it up all the way and it's still muffled. It's criminal.
I finished the book in a day, every minute a pleasure. Thanks, so much, Peggy Noonan.
- Peggy Noonan, the girl behind Reagans' words. She is a former broadcast news writer for Dan Rather. She then brought a new voice into the male dominated world of the White House speachwriter. She brings a smile to the reader with her wonderful analogies and her beautiful, caressing, witty, and poetic words. Her knack for remembering the details is uncanny. At times I find her hard to follow----there is a lot going on in that fast paced mind. And she often goes off into a "daydream". This book brings us into the discussions and interactions inside the White House. She begins with her childhood (a world of innocence), then moves to her break from liberalism to conservatism (world of imperialist thought); and this is what she says:
"What had seemed in my youth the party of rich dullards became, almost in spite of itself, the party of the people----it is about me, and what led me to be the first of my family to become that dread thing, a Republican. It is about CBS, where I worked, about the media in general and their dance with politics, a woman in politics, and visitor for five years to its capital............ it is about that too. Most of all, I suppose, it's about Reagan, the man at the center of the big turn, and what his presidency meant, and what I saw at the revolution." And this to some it up: "I just start at the beginning and end at the end. There are times when I express myself in a manner that might fairly be called idiosyncratic. Sometimes I experimented with writing speeches in free verse, which may five you an idea of what you're occasionally in for."
Noonan gives us examples of crucial speeches, the contributors, and the steps that go into putting them together. She expresses her aggravation of the editing process and the words that went into the recycle bin. She is uniquely intuitive and observant of her contemporaries
Noonan, with her heartfelt telling, brings us into the company of this very special, humble, and unassuming man, Reagan. (I'm happy to know him a little better.) Reagan was truly a blessing. His sense of humor was refreshing. Noonan will tell us she saw a lonely man, and through all this, she says, she still didn't know him. The last conversation she had with him, he told her about a reoccurring dream he had about living in a big house----it was clear, "a house that was available at a price I could afford". She concludes with the final years in the Reagan administration and her stint with Bush. Yes, Reagan had something to do with the fall of Communism.
Wish you well
Scott
- Peggy Noonan is almost Shakespearean in her command and use of the English language. Her words flow like a soft brook on quiet Sunday morning.
My favorite part was where she was talking about the experience of going to work in Washington, DC. The three steps are:
1. Awe of those in power.
2. Thinking "Man, I'm as smart as these people."
and finally
3. My God, WE are in charge?
Priceless!
Well done and a great read.
- Peggy Noonan is a gifted writer with a great sense of humor, and she is certainly an exceptional student of human nature. In this book, she takes a young English major's talents into the Reagan White House and gives us, the reader, a unique picture of what it was like for her to work there writing speeches for the man whom she considers to be the greatest president of her lifetime. At the same time, she paints vivid and often humorous portraits of many of those with whom she worked and interacted, as well as of those with whom she often clashed over the words she chose.
The problem that Ms. Noonan, and other speech writers, faced was that although they were not high ranking government bureaucrats or administration "decision makers," the words they wrote were the words which would be spoken by the President of the United States and, as such, her words would be taken by the American people and by leaders around the world as representing the views and positions of the United States of America.
The National Security Council (NSC) members, the Defense Department, the State Department, and others were, therefore, concerned that what was said actually represented their understandings of America's stances and positions on the various issues. They didn't want any room left for misinterpretation or misunderstanding, yet they were terrible writers. This, of course, led to many contentious arguments with and among the various reviewers before the comments of perhaps forty or fifty reviewers could somehow be reconciled or discarded and a speech could go forward to the president's desk for his final approval. Peggy Noonan tells this story in an often surprising and humorous, yet insightful, way making this an interesting and fun book to read.
Two of the buzz words often used by managers these days to prod their employees are "delight" and "surprise" as in "delight and surprise your customers." When I began writing this appraisal, that phrase kept coming to mind. Clearly, Peggy Noonan has succeeded in surprising me and her book obviously delighted me.
- What an amazingly wide-ranging memoir Peggy Noonan wrote! Read this book if you want to know--
* what it was like growing up in the Fifties, Sixties, and Seventies,
* what it was like to work at a major news network (CBS) as it made the awkward, transition from radio to TV,
* how the White House speechwriting process worked,
* what went on inside the Reagan administration,
* what it was like to be a woman in a field dominated by men,
* what it was like to be a working-class, Fairleigh Dickinson-educated Jersey girl in a town populated by the old boys network and the Ivy League,
* what Reagan was like in person,
* how elements of the conservative movement fought and cooperated in the White House, and
* much, much more.
Having come to Reagan administration from CBS (where she worked for Dan Rather), Noonan spent only a few years at the White House in the mid-1980s -- long enough, though, to write some of Reagan's most memorable and moving speeches, including the Challenger and D-Day speeches -- but she saw, and participated in, so much. She describes her experiences with wit and humor and candor -- and, of course, the wonderful writing for which we've come to know her.
Despite her own conservative politics and love for Reagan, this is not hagiography. Even as she stands clearly in awe of the president, he remains a mystery to her, a distant enigma. She is uncertain whether Reagan's aides are actually manipulating him, or whether it's Reagan who's really doing the manipulating of his aides who seem always to be at odds. And even as she stands clearly in awe of working in the White House, Noonan is quickly frustrated by the in-fighting among staff members, the bureaucratic fights among departments and agencies. This is particularly the case with the "staffing" of speeches, in which each department -- State, for example, and the National Security Council -- reviews a speech and basically tears it apart. Nor are Noonan's impressions of Nancy Reagan and Maureen Reagan particularly positive.
In short, I think it's fair to say that the book is a classic of the genre.
Read more...
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Bill Shore. By Random House Trade Paperbacks.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $4.50.
There are some available for $0.12.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about The Cathedral Within: Transforming Your Life by Giving Something Back.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Alan Pell Crawford. By Simon & Schuster.
The regular list price is $15.00.
Sells new for $3.00.
There are some available for $2.92.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Unwise Passions: A True Story of a Remarkable Woman---and the First Great Scandal of Eighteenth-Century America.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Anne LaBastille. By Penguin (Non-Classics).
The regular list price is $15.00.
Sells new for $3.99.
There are some available for $1.87.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Woodswoman: Living Alone in the Adirondack Wilderness.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Donna Brazile. By Simon & Schuster.
The regular list price is $13.00.
Sells new for $2.88.
There are some available for $2.43.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Cooking with Grease: Stirring the Pots in America.
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Nancy Mitford. By NYRB Classics.
The regular list price is $12.95.
Sells new for $3.96.
There are some available for $2.80.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Madame de Pompadour (New York Review Books Classics).
Posted in Biography (Monday, July 7, 2008)
Written by Sarah Katherine Lewis. By Seal Press.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $5.81.
There are some available for $3.98.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Indecent: How I Make It and Fake It as a Girl for Hire.
|