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Kennedy And Nixon: The Rivalry That Shaped Postwar Usa
 
 
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Kennedy And Nixon: The Rivalry That Shaped Postwar Usa [Anglais] [Broché]

Christopher Matthews

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Amazon.com

Christopher Matthews, the Washington bureau chief for the San Francisco Examiner and a former aide to Tip O'Neill, offers a fascinating look at the connections between the two most well-known politicians in the last 40 years. He traces the symmetries of their beginnings--both were elected to the House of Representatives in 1946 and assigned to the same committee--as well as their similar thirst for power. While both men's rise and fall, events that had profound effects on America, have been well chronicled, Matthews' book is one of the few, if not only, that places the two in parallel historical context. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .

From Publishers Weekly

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.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .

From Library Journal

What caused the rift between Kennedy and Nixon, one-time friends and ideological soul mates, is the subject of this eminently readable dual political biography. Matthews, noted television commentator and author (Hardball: How Politics Is Played, HarperPerennial, 1989), shows how these two anti-New Dealers, anti-Communists, and freshmen members of Congress in 1946 became enemies as their political careers advanced. Kennedy's father donated $1000 to Nixon's 1950 senatorial campaign and even promised his support to Nixon in 1960 if Kennedy was denied the presidential nomination. Both men became enemies for life as a result of the bitter 1960 election. Kennedy never forgave Nixon for receiving almost as many votes as he did. Nixon never forgave Kennedy for establishing a dynasty he thought unbeatable. Even after the assassination, Nixon waged war against Robert and Ted, as well as JFK's ghost and the myth of Camelot. Matthews's portrayal of these political icons demonstrates that, in the words of Kennedy's secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, they were more like "two men on third" than the opposites they are believed to be. Highly recommended for public libraries.
-?Karl Helicher, Upper Merion Township Lib., King of Prussia, Pa.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .

The New York Times Book Review, Richard Brookhiser

Mr. Matthews tells his stories well, and Americans have a seemingly bottomless need to have these stories retold. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .

From AudioFile

When Kennedy and Nixon are mentioned, everybody has their own images of these famous politicians, arousing strong feelings and memories. From 1946 to their deaths the biography traces their interconnected political careers, common causes and attitudes, as well as those that differentiated the two. Nelson Runger brings these past presidents, and many of their staff, to life, capturing each president's intonation and phrasing when reading speeches and missives. In fact, each political character sounds as if he is actually speaking. Fascinating for its content, captivating for its excellent narration, Kennedy and Nixon brings the politicians to life. M.B.K. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

Booklist

Two extraordinary and controversial political careers are surveyed in this snappily composed book. A master of arranging anecdotes, Matthews regales readers with oft-told stories of Nixon's and Kennedy's start in politics and events culminating in their famous televised debates of 1960, followed by Kennedy's victory. Matthews also includes revealing stories of their personal relationship, as when, in their early days as representatives, the bachelor Kennedy gave the married Nixon names of women Nixon might want to visit! The supersquare demurred. Scrolling through the years, Matthews stops longest at each man's campaigns (the themes, the attacks, the hardball tactics). At some point, Matthews pinpoints the 1960 election, Kennedy became contemptuous of Nixon, who, though always awkwardly cordial to his rival, returned the animosity by keeping a wary eye on the Kennedy clan. Nixon's vigilance--though not his methods--was amply justified in the Watergate scandal: Kennedyites were prominent among the forces that felled him. Matthews, glib but not cynical, recasts the familiar with an exciting sense of novelty and an energizing manner that will attract new readers to an old subject. Gilbert Taylor --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .

Kirkus Reviews

Matthews, the news anchor of the televison show America's Talking, offers an on- target dual portait of rival aspirants for the presidency, both eventually successful in their quest for the prize, both destined to end tragically. Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy, Navy veterans of WW II, were elected as members of the House of Representatives' freshman class of 1946. At first they were friendly rivals: Matthews writes touchingly of their cordial personal relationship as colleagues (often sickly during his Senate career, Kennedy received regular hospital visits from the sympathetic Nixon). Nixon rose first, winning the vice presidency under Dwight Eisenhower (Kennedy cheered Nixon's rise in a personal note to the new vice president) and building a national reputation. The bitter and close-fought campaign of 1960 transformed the relationship between the two men: In the now legendary televised debates, Nixon came off as colorless and tired, while the handsome, relaxed Kennedy impressed viewers with his wit and command of detail. As the author shows, the exchanges between the two rivals, who were never far apart on policy matters, became abusive and personal as Election Day approached. In the end, Nixon lost the popular poll by little more than 100,000 votes. Bitter about alleged ballot theft in Texas, Illinois, and elsewhere, Nixon was convinced for the rest of his life that he'd been ambushed by the Kennedy machine. Nixon was eclipsed during Camelot's thousand days: even after Kennedy's 1963 assassination, he was haunted by the ghosts of Camelot and, more concretely, by the political prospects of Kennedy's brothers. Succumbing to paranoia even after his election to the presidency in 1968, Nixon conducted covert surveillances and smear campaigns against Ted Kennedy, Kennedy family allies, and other political opponents, a propensity that contributed to his eventual downfall and disgrace. Matthews doesn't break new ground, but he draws a striking picture of the destruction of a political friendship and its consequences for the country. (8 pages b&w photos, not seen) (First serial to Vanity Fair and Reader's Digest; author tour) -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .

Ingram

A nationally syndicated columnist and political pundit explores the personal and political relationship of Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy, showing how the course of that relationship reflected that of the whole nation. Reprint. 35,000 first printing."

Simon & Schuster

First as friends, then as bitter enemies, John Kennedy and Richard Nixon shared a rivalry that had a dramatic impact on American history and that has never been understood until now. One would become the most dashing figure of the post-World War II era, the other would live into his eighties, haunted and consumed by the rivalry. In Kennedy and Nixon, Christopher Matthews offers a fresh and surprising look at these two political giants, offering a stunning portrait that will change the way we think about both of them. John Kennedy and Richard Nixon shared a dream of being the great young leader of their age. Starting as congressmen in the class of 1946, the two men developed a friendship and admiration for each other that would last for more than a decade. But what drove history, Matthews shows, was the enmity between these two towering figures whose 1960 presidential contest would set the nation's bitter course for years to come. In this startling dual portrait - a modern-day Amadeus, with Nixon as the talented, frustrated, always outdone Salieri to Kennedy's Mozart, the charismatic genius - Matthews shows how the early fondness between the two men (Kennedy told a trusted friend that if he didn't receive the Democratic nomination in 1960, he would vote for Nixon) degenerated into distrust and paranoia, the same emotions that, in the early 1970's, ravaged the nation. Christopher Mattew's revealing book sheds new light on this complicated relationship and the role that it played in shaping America's history. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Relié .
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