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Hardcover Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988 Book

ISBN: 039545185X

ISBN13: 9780395451854

Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

This is an expose of the last four years of Ronald Reagan's presidency, which studies internal rivalries and dissension within the White House. It provides revelatory material about Donald Regan and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Why wasn't RR impeached?

Forgive an outsider commenting on US politics(if you can!!).Reagan was always popular in the USA, whereas in Western Europe he was almost universally regarded as a senile old buffer.After reading this,US readers will think again about the European perspective. Mayer and McManus,who wrote for those deranged left-wing papers the LA Times and the Wall Street Journal,paint a picture of someone cut off from reality and capable of believing anything.So,sending arms to Iran in exchange for hostages was not an arms-for-hostages deal.Diverting Iranian money to the Contras in Nicaragua(banned under US law)was all fine and dandy. Then there are Poindexter and North,who subcontracted US foriegn policy and did what they wished,quoting "The President" as their carte blanche to do just about anything. I ended up feeling sorry for Ronnie-his patent incapacity for the job,the fools and knaves who surrounded him and exploited his popularity for their own ends,and what we know now to be early signs of Altzhiemer's make this quite a touching depiction,even if extremely critical of Ronnie's politics and policies.Well worth a read,but you'll have to get a secondhand copy.

The best book on Iran-Contra

This oddly titled book is actually the best and most incisive work you can read on the Iran-Contra Affair. The book describes in detail how Reagan set broad ideological guidelines, and expected those who worked under him to carry out the details and not bring him problems. Did Reagan know that Bill Casey and North were funneling money to the Contras and lying to Congress? As the book details, there is no substantive evidence that he knew this. However, it is clear that Reagan orchestrated the illegal sale and transfer of weapons to Iran in exchange for hostage releases. The quid pro quo was discussed in any number of cabinet meetings including Reagan, Bush, Weinberger, Regan, and others. Does this make them all guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors? It certainly does.

Can't Believe It's So Obscure

I sell used books and just happened to come across this. I'm straining to remember it (I'd be really surprised if it hadn't caused some ripples, as it came out in '88 when RR was still in office) but I just have no recollection. I'm a Democrat who was sort of undergoing a gradual process of reevaluating Reagan in a more positive light. Nevermind! The book makes a very strong indictment of RR as a decent enough fellow who was grossly incompetent as a President. My impression is that the authors are fairly moderate:a guy from the LA Times and a gal from the Wall St. Journal;neither are liberal papers. The used copies are way cheaper than they deserve to be (I'm keeping mine). Pulitzer Prize material IMO. Read it!

Detailed and Well Written

What a wonderful book this turned out to be. I was expecting a far more biased attack on the Reagan administration overall, instead the authors provided a well researched and written history of the last term of Reagan's presidency. The authors spent the vast majority of their time talking over the Iran - Contra issue and they did a good job of it. There is a wealth of details that really take you through the whole event from idea generation through execution to cover up. I also liked the details of how the staff did or did not get along, I have read some memoirs of some of the staff and they did not give me the full picture unlike this book. This book brought it all together. My biggest surprise was how out of it Reagan seamed to be. I have always heard the positive about Reagan was that he stuck to his agenda, but after reading the book you see that at times he did not or he flat out ran out of agenda items. A good case that style wins over substance in American politics. The only knock I have on the book would be that the ending was a bit rushed. The authors could have spent more time on the last two years and how the investigation shook out to give a more complete picture. This is the reason I did not give the book 5 stars. Overall it is a great book that I would recommend to anyone interested in the time period, the Reagan presidency or the Iran / Contra issue.

The Dark Side of Ronald Reagan

This book explores the underside of the Reagan Presidency. The surprise is not that Reagan was not in control of underlings like Oliver North, but that he was so out of touch that incoming Chief of Staff Howard Baker actually considered whether the constitutional provision for removing an incapacitated President might have to be invoked! Mayer and McManus write with the sharp eye of crack investigative reporters. While the results may not be as compelling as "All the President's Men," they still present an unsettling account of what goes on in the corridors of power.
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