I've
read quite a few books on the Clintons in the
last few years -- and now that Hillary will be
trying to finish America off -- I plan to do
much more reading.
I post
a little something about my impression on these
books as I read them.
I read
this book when it first came out. While ole
George Stephanopoulos blows in some of the dirty
tricks of the Clintons for his first election --
George is a Liberal. Make no mistake about it. I
actually breifly felt sorry for Clinton when I
finished the book -- for about five minutes!
This is a really good book about the election
campaign and the first couple of years in the
White House -- but keep in mind there is a
pretty bif Liberal slant to it.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
A Rhodes scholar with a
healthy ego, the young
idealist George
Stephanopoulos thought
he was ready for the
obscure governor of
Arkansas. But soon after
he signed on as his
presidential-campaign
manager, the odds of
Clinton's triumph
soared, and so did the
chance for calamity via
Gennifer Flowers and
other scandals.
Stephanopoulos scrambled
behind the scenes,
squelching rumors,
spinning major news
organizations, artfully
knifing Clinton rivals,
and second-guessing
public opinion--lessons
that would serve him
well when Clinton won.
For the next four years,
Stephanopoulos was a few
feet from the president,
advising him on
everything from Iraq and
Waco to gays in the
military and Paula
Jones. More than any
book yet--including
Monica Lewinsky's--Stephanopoulos's
memoir reveals what went
on in the scary,
occasionally hilarious
world backstage at the
White House. He casts
stark light on
characters from Yeltsin,
"like a boiled potato
slathered in sour
cream," to the author's
nemesis Dick Morris,
whom he depicts
bellowing for Clinton to
bomb Bosnia. And nobody
who's talking knows as
well as Stephanopoulos
the most passionate,
mystifying affair of
all, between Bill and
Hillary.
But years of backroom
scheming, screaming, and
relentless political
attacks took a toll.
Stephanopoulos's face
erupted in hives; he
grew a beard. Slammed by
clinical depression, he
dangerously delayed
medical attention,
fearing the story might
leak. This memoir
could've been titled
Prisoner of Spin.
Written with the jittery
cadence of a bookie,
All Too Human is a
lively look at the
complex and motley cast
of characters who rule
the world. --Rebekah
Warren
Wow --
if this book doesn't scare you -- nothing will.
It was written by a British Investigative
Reporter -- and he appears to be very credible.
The back half of the book has all of the facts
and evidence. The book started out kinda slow
talking about the Oklahoma Bombing -- and then
connects up with the Clinton Connection. Another
section of the book deals with Bill Clinton's
involvement with the Dixie Mafia, and yet
another on the Vince Foster cover-up. If you
read just one book -- make it be this one. After
you get past the first 50 pages -- you won't put
it down. Review is below:
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
These days, it seems
like everyone's a Friend
of Bill--Clinton's
buddies from Arkansas
are turning up in
powerful White House
positions faster than
you can say
"Whitewater." But make
no mistake, British
journalist Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard is no
F.O.B.: in the course of
The Secret Life of
Bill Clinton's
350-plus pages, he
manages to connect the
president to everything
from 1997's Oklahoma
City bombing to
Arkansas's drug
underworld to the
mysterious death of
White House aide and
longtime Clinton friend
Vince Foster, and, of
course, to Paula Jones.
According to
Evans-Pritchard--who has
reported for the
London-based
Spectator, Sunday
Telegraph (where he
served as Washington
bureau chief), and
Daily Telegraph
newspapers--Clinton's
"original sin" was the
Waco incident, the FBI's
much-criticized assault
on the Branch Davidian
community in Texas that
led to the deaths of 76
people. From that point
on, the author asserts,
it was all downhill for
the American people.
Evans-Pritchard's exposé
of Arkansas's favorite
son is indeed scathing:
he documents the
then-governor's drug use
and consort with
prostitutes (primarily
in the company of
ne'er-do-well brother
Roger); innumerable lies
to friends, staff
members, and the people
who empowered him;
numerous infidelities;
blackmail--the list goes
on and on.
Evans-Pritchard claims
that, because he is not
an American citizen, he
is not "beholden to any
political or financial
interest in the United
States," and he does not
"hang on lips of
official sources," nor
does he "fear the loss
of access in Washington,
or the blackball of
[his] profession"; in
other words, he ain't
afraid to call 'em like
he sees 'em. And
although many of his
seemingly wild claims
and accusations are
substantiated by
thorough notes and
appendixes following the
text (including copies
of original FBI
documents), you're never
quite convinced
of the author's
theories. Whether or not
you come to believe, as
Evans-Pritchard does,
that "Arkansas was a
mini-Colombia within the
United States, infested
by narco-corruption";
that--because of William
Jefferson Clinton--"you
can sniff the pungent
odors of decay in the
American body politic";
that the president's
"actions and character
... have engendered the
most deadly terrorist
movement in the
industrialized world,"
you will most certainly
be entertained and
enlightened by the dirt
this British muckraker
has uncovered. You may
not be an F.O.B., but
after reading this book,
you may not mind so
much.
Book Description
An illustrious
investigative reporter
adds shocking new and
exclusive revelations to
his swelling bag of
Clinton scandals.
This
was another good book. It was written by one of
the Military officers who followed Clinton
around with the "Nuclear Football", which is the
codes to launch a nuclear strike. As someone who
served in the Military, I was interested in
Buzz' slant on the Clintons.
His
book is very military -- and very matter of
fact. He doesn't appear to have an axe to grind
-- but was appalled with the Clinton's hate for
the military. He tells in one story where he's
assigned to the nuclear football at one of
Clinton's golf games and Sandy Berger is trying
to get Buzz to get Clinton to call him. It turns
out that they knew exactly where Osama Bin Laden
was and there's a couple of fighters on the
tarmac running and waiting for the President to
give the word. Berger is grinding Buzz to get
Clinton to call him -- and Buzz is continued to
be told by Clinton to go away when he tries to
get Clinton to send the fighters to kill Bin
Laden.
He
also tells about how Hillary hates the Military
so much that they couldn't where a uniform in
the White House -- and had to step into the
first doorway when in the same hallway as her --
as she refused to even look at a military man.
He also tells how high ranking officers were
used a golf cadis and go-fers when Chelsea would
forget her school books. There are many more
stories like this -- but just buy the book and
read for yourself!
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Air Force Lieutenant
Colonel Robert "Buzz"
Patterson was a military
aide to President
Clinton from May 1996 to
May 1998 and one of five
individuals entrusted
with carrying the
"nuclear football"—the
bag containing the codes
for launching nuclear
weapons. This
responsibility meant
that he spent a
considerable amount of
time next to the
president, giving him a
unique perspective on
the Clinton
administration. Though
he arrived at the job
"filled with
professional devotion
and commitment to
serve," he left
believing that Clinton
had "sown a whirlwind of
destruction upon the
integrity of our
government, endangered
our national security,
and done enormous harm
to the American military
in which I served."
Dereliction of
Duty is not a
personal attack on
President Clinton or a
commentary on his
various scandals;
rather, it is a "frank
indictment of his
obvious—to an
eyewitness—failure to
lead our country with
responsibility and
honor." Lt. Col.
Patterson offers a
damning list of
anecdotes and charges
against the President,
including how Clinton
lost the nuclear codes
and shrugged it off; how
he stalled and lost the
opportunity to launch a
direct strike on Osama
bin Laden at a confirmed
location; how the
President and the First
Lady, and much of their
staff, consistently
treated members of the
military with disrespect
and disdain; and how
Clinton groped a female
Air Force enlisted
member while aboard Air
Force One, among other
incidents large and
small. A considerable
portion of this slim
book is devoted to the
myriad ways in which
President Clinton
undermined the military,
and hence the security,
of the nation. He
seriously questions
Clinton's decisions to
send troops to Somalia,
Rwanda, Haiti, and
Bosnia to accomplish
non-military tasks
without clear
objectives. Having
participated in each of
these engagements, Lt.
Col. Patterson
personally "experienced
the frustration of
needlessly wasted lives,
effort, and national
prestige" as well as the
alarmingly low morale
that Clinton inspired.
This is certainly not
the first anti-Clinton
book, but it is
different in that
Patterson does not seem
to have a political ax
to grind. In fact, at
times, he appears
apologetic about having
to write about his
ex-commander in chief.
Yet, in the end, this
retired soldier felt his
last act of service
should be to share his
experience with his
country. --Shawn
Carkonen
I'm
not going to lie to you -- of all the Clinton
books I've read, Dick Morris does have the
biggest axe to grind. However, he most likely
knows more about the Clintons than anyone still
living. This book mainly takes many of the lies
told by Clinton over the years and in his book
-- and one by one explains why it is a lie --
backing it up with proof. It is a very
entertaining book -- that also deals with
Hillary.
A man whose
presidency was disgraced
by impeachment -- yet
who remains one of the
most popular presidents
of our time.
A man whose
autobiography, My
Life, was panned by
critics as a
self-indulgent daily
diary -- but rode the
bestseller lists for
months.
A man whose policies
changed America at the
close of the twentieth
century -- yet whose
weakness left us
vulnerable to terror at
the dawn of the
twenty-first.
No one better
understands the inner
Bill Clinton, that
creature of endless and
vexing contradiction,
than Dick Morris. From
the Arkansas governor's
races through the
planning of the
triumphant 1996
reelection, Morris was
Clinton's most valued
political adviser. Now,
in the wake of Clinton's
million-selling memoir
My Life, Morris
and his wife, Eileen
McGann, set the record
straight with
Because He Could, a
frank and perceptive
deconstruction of the
story Clinton tells --
and the many more
revealing stories he
leaves untold.
With the same keen
insight they brought to
Hillary Clinton's life
in their recent
bestseller Rewriting
History, Morris and
McGann uncover the
hidden sides of the
complicated and
sometimes dysfunctional
former president.
Whereas Hillary is
anxious to mask who she
really is, they show,
Bill Clinton
inadvertently reveals
himself at every turn --
as both brilliant and
undisciplined, charming
yet often filled with
rage, willing to take
wild risks in his
personal life but deeply
reluctant to use the
military to protect our
national security. The
Bill Clinton who emerges
is familiar --
reflexively blaming
every problem on
right-wing persecutors
or naïve advisers -- but
also surprising:
passive, reactive,
working desperately to
solve a laundry list of
social problems yet
never truly grasping the
real thrust of his own
presidency. And while he
courted danger in his
personal life, the
authors argue that
Clinton's downfall has
far less to do with his
private demons than with
his fear of the one
person who controlled
his future: his own
first lady.
Sharp and stylishly
written, full of
revealing insider
anecdotes, Because
He Could is a fresh
and probing portrait of
one of the most
fascinating, and
polarizing, figures of
our time.
Stay
tuned (as in Check Back) as I have another dozen
Clinton books to read and report back on.