Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush by Jon Meacham | Summary & Analysis
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Reviews for Destiny and Power
71 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I enjoyed reading this bio about Bush.
While lacking the amount of detail I prefer, it told me the story of Bush growing up through his 'retirement', and much of it is derived from Bush's diaries making it feel autobiographical at times.
Easy to read and had a good flow to it. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jon Meacham is an excellent writer. This book was obviously well researched as just about all of Meacham's books are. After reading this book, my high opinion of George H.W Bush has grown. I think he was a good President but had a difficult problem in communicating to the American public. As good as President as I thought he was, I found him to be a very impressive man of principles. Meacham did a very good job in showing how Bush was extremely loyal, particularly to Ronald Reagan. In some ways, Bush's loyalty may have hurt him politically, particularly when he ran for President in 1988. It's's also interesting the contrast between Bush 41's Iraq strategy versus Bush 43's wartime strategies. It's a very long book – – over 800 pages, but worth the effort and time.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Coming to the Oval Office at a critical time in foreign and domestic affairs, the Presidency of George H.W. Bush was filled with successes and failures but guided by a steady hand. Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush by Jon Meacham brings together independent historical research and interviews from the former President and numerous family members as well as political colleagues and advisories to bring the life and career of the 41st President to readers.Meacham begins the biography with a family history of G.H.W. Bush’s father and mother showing how their lives were shaped that would influence their second son and made him the competitive though ego suppressing individual he was. Though Meacham gave overall historical background for certain situations, this was a book focusing on the life of G.H.W. Bush and what he did throughout his life from his post-war decision to forgo an easy career on Wall Street to join the oil business to Texas and being his own man in politics and not agree with everything his father Prescott believed while serving in the Senate. A political career that had as many defeats as victories, G.H.W. Bush’s path to the White House was through public service, especially throughout the 1970s especially in the diplomat sphere that would later impact his handling of foreign affairs of his Presidency. Meacham covers the Vice Presidential and Presidential terms in detail which cover over half the book before ending with the former President’s unique retirement as elder statesman and father of a serving President of the United States and an analysis of his relationship with his son during those years.Taking roughly a decade of research, interviews, and writing Meacham presents a thoroughly well-rounded view of the 41st President, Barbara Bush, and their relationships with their children within reason. The elder Bush and Barbara allowed Meacham a free hand in written and this is evident in their attitudes to individuals being put in print and Meacham analysis of various controversies particularly Iran-Contra scandal. If there is one drawback is that at the time of publication the 41st President was still alive with several years left to live and express his views on things, but also a biography after the subjects death allows time afterwards to fully analyze their lives and that difference was evident.Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush is a very written and thorough biography of the 41st President of the United States. Like his other biographies, Jon Meacham’s research and analysis give a vivid description of his subject and his family. This is a highly recommended biography for anyone interested in the 41st President or the particular time in the 20th Century when he was in office.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jon Meacham was granted extraordinary access to Mr. Bush, his diaries, his family, and those with whom he worked during his long career. He gives us a very human portrait of an ambitious man who felt duty-bound to serve others. We Bush as a child briefly, then as an oil man, Congressman, ambassador to China, chairman of the Republican Party, CIA director, Vice President under Ronald Reagan, and the President whose popularity reached astonishing highs after the Gulf War, but fell so dramatically that he soundly lost his reelection bid, and as a retired elder statesman, whose sons follow in his footsteps.I am a fairly liberal-leaning Democrat, and have always viewed George H. W. Bush as the finest Republican politician of my lifetime. Destiny and Power solidified his place in my mind, and made me appreciate President Bush even more. He exemplified honor, dignity, and decency in a quiet and understated way. An excellent book about a truly exceptional man.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5POLITICAL BIOGRAPHYJon MeachamDestiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker BushRandom HouseEbook, 978-0-81299-820-7 (also available in hardcover, large print paperback, as an audio book, and on Audible), 864 pgs., $17.99November 10, 2015 When George Herbert Walker Bush was five years old his school report cards included the category “Claims More Than His Fair Share of Time and Attention in Class.” His parents didn’t worry about this category. Bush’s nickname was “Have-Half” because he split everything he had with friends. Eighty-five years later he is much the same. Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush is Jon Meacham’s account of the life of the forty-first president, “a child of one generation’s ruling class, the head of another’s, and the father of yet a third.” Meacham presents Bush as a man of humility and compassion as well as ambitious and deeply competitive, a believer in compromise, diplomacy, and the power of personal relationships. A well-balanced account, Destiny and Power progresses briskly and never belabors a point. Meacham provides insightful analysis of family dynamics in Bush’s formative years, a recitation of the facts liberally leavened with anecdotes, and a good mix of formal and candid photos. Meacham had access to Bush’s diaries that he spoke into a hand-held recorder which provides a sense of immediacy—Bush’s thoughts in real time. Meacham is fond of his subject and writes thrillingly of the “dazzling, epochal news” of the fall of the Berlin wall and chillingly of Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Bush’s diary allows us to watch his thinking develop as he struggles toward “This will not stand.” But Meacham doesn’t mince words regarding controversies such as Iran-Contra, deemed “unworthy of [Bush’s] essential character.” Meacham reinforces the point throughout the book that “with Bush one got both hardball and high-mindedness, with the former being played in order to give him the power to put the latter into action.” However, Meacham doesn’t address the damage done to American political discourse resulting in polarization. Bush’s personal story is the larger story of how the Republican Party moved to the right in Texas and nationally.Meacham explores the relationship between Bush and George W.’s presidency, including personal correspondence between them as George W. prepares to invade Iraq, as well as what Bush thought of “axis of evil” rhetoric and his estimation of Dick Cheney’s vice presidency. Bush “returned on several occasions to the subject of Dick Cheney, whom he believed . . . had his own empire there.” Cheney, upon reading the transcript, smiled and said, “Fascinating.”Bush’s legendary life is conveyed with profound details such as telling his diary on the eve of Operation Desert Storm, “The face of war looks at me,” and Gorbachev’s gift to Bush Christmas morning, 1991, when he called “to announce the end of the experiment in Communism born in the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.” Meacham humanizes that legendary life with charming details: Bush’s “Merry Christmas” socks, his staff stocking hotel rooms with pork rinds and Dr. Pepper, and the occasional shower with Millie, the springer spaniel.Bush may be, as Meacham says, “the last gentleman” who used “privilege to build, not to consume or to coast.” If so, the nation will be poorer for it.Originally published in Lone Star Literary Life.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I find Meacham's presidential bios very interesting and very readable. He seems to focus on just the right level of detail and analysis on all the major points in his subject's life. I enjoyed this book very much, and came away from the book liking Bush '41 more than going in. Though I never voted for any of the Bushes I felt a lot of respect for Bush '41. I thought he elevated the office in a way that many of his contemporaries did not match. He was truly a gentleman President (ala FDR) and enhanced the office of the Presidency in the eyes of world leaders as well.Here are a few things that surprised me and/or that I feel are worth noting, in no particular order. The Bushes, early on, lost a three year old daughter, Robin, to leukemia. Bush mentions her many, many times throughout the entire book. Heart-wrenching. It is no surprise that he is an emotional guy. The word "cry" is mentioned a lot, but Bush 41 was tough when he had to be. There exists throughout the 600 pages evidence of a very strong, very loving, emotional bond within the family for one another. Barbara is mentioned often, particularly her view on things, while Laura is mentioned rarely, though affectionately and respectfully. While Meacham, in the epilogue, summarizes that Bush made a number of shifts in issue positions, largely for political reasons, I felt these were out-weighed by the number of occasions where he chose "to do the right thing" knowing he would pay a stiff penalty, e.g, raising taxes following "read my lips".Bush showed strong patriotic fervor for his country in enlisting fresh out of high school (soon after Pearl harbor) and is thought to be the youngest navy pilot at that time. Though his plane was badly crippled from anti-aircraft flak he flew on and dropped his bomb load on target before parachuting. Lots of detail here on his relationship with the Reagans, one that built slowly and was cherished eventually by both men - though apparently not with Nancy R. Bush had a rather varied career pre-presidency that included not only the CIA but also the RNC. I forgot that he was very close to the White House in the latter assignment during the Watergate days.I was surprised how tired Bush was from the job "only" 2 1/2 years into it; this was following victory in the first Iraq War, but apparently these post-victory crashes are par for the course. I'm sure in the days ahead I will think of a dozen other tidbits that I enjoyed and wish that I had included here, but bottomline - Highly Recommended.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush,Jon Meacham, author; Paul Michael, narratorIt is obvious from the start of the book that Jon Meacham has respect and genuine affection for George Herbert Walker Bush. That is not a good reason to dislike or fail to appreciate the excellent job he did of defining Bush 41’s, life, unless you are an ideologue who cannot accept any positive presentation of a member of the Republican Party. For me, the book was well researched, informative and interesting. Although it is quite long, and sometimes repetitive, I found it to be a steady paced commentary on the life of the 41st President of the United States, with the information presented taken largely from the his diaries and the diaries of the First Lady. Bush is a man who represents the past, a time of far better manners and decorum both in and out of the White House. That is a fact that I believe cannot be disputed. The narrator did a fine job modulating his voice so that even though it could have been slow going to read such a tome, it was always engaging.Raised with old-fashioned values and a code of ethics largely no longer in existence, he is the last of a dying breed. He was taught to respect women and to care about those less fortunate than he. He was taught to “always do the right thing”. He was taught to honor and love his country and those were the same values he and his wife of more than 70 years, Barbara Pierce, tried to inculcate into their own children. Bush fell in love with Barbara while still in his teens and they married before he finished his term of duty during WWII when he was 20 and she, only 19.Bush enlisted in 1943, at age 18, after graduating high school. He believed it was the honorable thing to do, to serve his country, and he found it hard to reconcile the fact that the President following him into the Oval Office had actually actively avoided the draft and service to his country. However, Bill Clinton was only the first of those to follow who saw no need to give to their country but rather to have their country give to them, which was quite a contrast to the request of former Democrat and President, John F. Kennedy, who requested that we “ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country!” The times have definitely changed in today’s America.I am not sure if he has been given the credit that is due him by his adversaries. He was criticized for not doing enough on the domestic front, yet he passed the American Disabilities Act, improved the Clean Air Bill and approved the Fair Housing Act. He also ushered in the end of the Cold War and successfully liberated Kuwait when it was invaded by Iraq. He has been unfairly maligned because he raised taxes, breaking his promise when he said “read my lips”. However, the deficit could not be curbed in any other way, and he chose to do what was best for the country, not himself or his future in politics. Also, one must not forget that both houses of Congress were controlled by the Democrats, at that time, so he had little choice to do otherwise. He could possibly fight them and shut down the government, or he could compromise. Always the gentleman, he chose to compromise and put the needs of America first.As the ultimate gentleman, he resisted going negative when campaigning, even though it meant he would lose. In his heart and mind, he always hoped and thought he would win, believing in the integrity of the electorate, sadly, a mistake, because they believed the lies that the biased media disseminated. During his run for reelection in 1992, the press coverage of Bush was 96% negative, proving that the fourth estate, once the watchdog, was now dead, or at the very least, under-performing. The media prejudice has since been proven, but the practice has continued. Shortly after he lost, his approval rating rose 15 points because they stopped hammering him and/or his associates with false accusations and innuendo.Bush was a man uniquely qualified to serve as Chief Executive. His past experience was broad and prepared him well. He was Republican Party chairman in Texas, and the Chairman of the Republican National Committee, he was a member of the House of Representatives, he was US Ambassador to the United Nations, he was the U.S. Envoy to China, he was director of the CIA, and he was Vice President before being elected to the highest office in the land. He served only one term, losing to a younger, more charismatic candidate, a man he eventually grew to like and respect, but a man who disappointed him because of his behavior and draft dodging. Still, Bush believed that Clinton’s private life should not be politicized and publicized as it was with the Lewinsky scandal. He knew that the President had important business to conduct and saw first hand that Europe was shocked by what they believed was the unnecessary attention given to the scandal. He understood the stress caused by the vitriol of the press when it was unleashed, but perhaps not the actual transgression. In the face of adversity, Bush always turned his attention to the future, not the past.To put it succinctly, this is a good book about a good man that was written by a good author! Meacham has presented an even handed picture of a man who put service to his country before service to himself, a man even held in high esteem by Barack Obama, a progressive Democrat, who honored him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom and praised the man and his service in the highest terms, noting his “humility and decency, and his seven decades of devotion to the United States.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Four and a half stars! Good writer, good subject, good book.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I think the best part of this book is in explaining why the 41st president of the United States struggled to understand a changing world that shook so many of his core beliefs. The most commonly mentioned source in the text is Bush's diary. While it is very revealing, it also is one dimensional. I also felt there could be more context to better explain Bush's choices and actions.
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Destiny and Power - . IRB Media
Summary
Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush by Jon Meacham is a biography of George H.W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States, who served from 1988 to 1992. The author argues that as president and as a politician, Bush used prudence and compromise to an extent that would seem out of place in today’s era of highly partisan US politics.
George H.W. Bush had a varied career before winning the presidency: he was a Navy pilot, oilman, congressman, ambassador to the UN, envoy to China, head of the Republican Party, and later director of the CIA. In the executive branch, he first served as vice president of the United States under Ronald Reagan for eight years before beginning his own presidency.
The book’s prologue opens with an emotional Bush trying to cope with his loss to Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton in the 1992 presidential election. After this prologue, the book’s early chapters focus on Bush’s grandparents, including Samuel Prescott Bush, and his great-grandfather George Herbert Walker, both of whom were successful businessmen. Bush was born into one of America’s richest and most politically connected families and, as a result, would have to overcome the view that he was just a privileged rich kid for most of his life.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Bush decided to join the Navy as an aviator at the age of 18. Bush