Armchair history for political junkies
In 1961, the publication of “The Making of the President” by Theodore
White, then a political reporter for Time magazine, became an instant
classic and huge commercial success, reaching the top of the New York
Times’ bestsellers list in only six weeks.
White’s book broke new ground because of its lively mix of
analysis and personal observations of the backstage maneuverings in
the Kennedy and Nixon presidential campaigns. Its popularity
demonstrated the large readership available for books on politics,
and many similar books have followed in its wake.
At the Newport Beach Public Library, interested readers can find a
variety of books on presidential elections, both past and present,
including White’s.
Another popular book is “One-Car Caravan,” by Walter Shapiro.
Shapiro, who’s a political columnist for USA Today, wrote an early
outlook at the 2004 Democratic nominees for president long before the
first scheduled primary. Traveling with the candidates across New
Hampshire, the author is given many opportunities to quietly assess
the characteristics of these presidential hopefuls.
Veteran Associated Press correspondent Walter Mears looks back at
a career of reporting on those who have aspired to be president in
“Deadlines Past: Forty Years of Presidential Campaigning.” Mears’s
narrative includes numerous anecdotes about his work as a wire
service reporter during the last 11 campaigns and is further
enlivened with personal asides on the many candidates he has known.
His observations of the pervasive influence of the media and the ways
in which the electoral process has changed are trenchant.
Jules Witcover, who has covered many campaigns, takes a long view
of the history of partisan politics, albeit from the perspective of
one of the major parties. “Party of the People: A History of the
Democrats” traces the history of the Democratic Party from its
origins more than two centuries ago. Along the way, the party has
evolved greatly from its Jeffersonian roots in agrarian principles
and the rights of individuals to its more recent emphasis on
progressive social and economic concerns. Witcover underscores the
current debate among Democrats over whether to return to the more
liberal policies of the past or continue on the centrist path blazed
by Bill Clinton.
Equal time should be given to Lewis Gould’s “Grand Old Party: A
History of the Republicans.” Gould, a political historian from the
University of Texas at Austin, surveys the long and shifting road
traveled by the GOP from its rise to national prominence with the
election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860 to the party’s more conservative
political stance today. The author presents compelling evidence of
the party’s embrace of widely varying platforms over the years. Gould
focuses particular attention on four presidents that, in his view,
most embody core Republican values.
Lastly, those dismayed by the turmoil surrounding the 2000
election may find comfort in the fact that the republic has weathered
similar storms in the past. In “Fraud of the Century,” Roy Morris
takes a fresh look at the disputed election of 1876 in which
Rutherford B. Hayes received fewer popular votes than his opponent,
Samuel Tilden, but still won the election by a single vote in the
Electoral College.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Steven Short. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
https://www.newport beachlibrary.org For more information on the
Central Library of any of the branch locations, please contact the
Newport Beach Public Library at (949) 717-3800, option 2.
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