Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream: The Most Revealing Portrait of a President and Presidential Power Ever Written

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(as of Aug 13, 2024 08:04:05 UTC – Details)

By: Doris Kearns Goodwin (Author)

An engrossing biography of President Lyndon…

Reviews

  1. bob birdsall

    good shipper
    no issues, product as described, good seller

  2. Amazon Customer

    Riveting, touching, candid bio of a man few could know until long after his death
    Doris Kearns Goodwin does not disappoint with this biography of Lyndon Johnson. It was an excellent book, fascinating and insightful perspective on one of the least understood presidents. Johnson was hard to understand until you understand how strategically he worked, how well he understood people, their motives, and where their natures would lead them. I loved this book but felt deepening sadness and, yes, grief, at how his presidency ended. He really took the high road, unbeknownst to the majority of the public, when he withdrew from re-election in 1968. His motives for public service were idealistic but pragmatic, too, and if it weren’t for him, many would not have achieved that standard of middle class that they were able to reach. Of course he had an ego and faults, but he was a very effective leader. Vietnam cannot be laid at his doorstep – none of the intelligence was good and all of it, and his advisors, contributed to the mess that Vietnam became. Knowing that he couldn’t bear to lose the goals of his Great Society dream and kept the cost of Vietnam a secret for as long as he did, in hindsight, was not such a terrible thing in my eyes. But he lost credibility and trust from the people because of that. His death, after hearing of Nixon’s plans to dismantle the Great Society, broke my heart. He was a good man who did a great deal for the American middle class, but he his remembered mostly for his ineffective handling of the Vietnam War and that is a terrible shame.

  3. Jaqueline Louisa Gibbons

    La autora ha conocido personalmente a Lyndon Johnson durante muchos años, empezando en la Casa Blanca y hasta su muerte en 1973. El libro te ayuda a conocer más a LBJ como persona. Muy interesante.

  4. RosemarieMenassas

    wait till you read this and find out just how sick and what a bastard he really was. Convinced me he had a lot to do with Killing Jack Kennedy. After all, who had the most to gain when he was about to be fired from his VEEP job!

  5. mishmish

    Doris K. Godwin draws an interesting and detailed picture of Lyndon B. Johnson, his quirks and hang-ups, his political skills, victories and failures. The author motivates the choices he makes by an analysis of his early reactions to his mother and father. These reactions presumably formed his character and were constant. His ambitions and political skills are brilliantly exposed, but the author leaves the reader hungry for more details of his private life. Did he have one or did politics devour all his energies? The relationship with his wife seemed to be an affectionate one, all the same.A more sympathetic image of LBJ is drawn as we better understand his negative attitudes towards the Kennedys and the whole Eastern Establishment. His vulgarities in speech and manner were often deliberately used to humiliate the more “refined” Ivy League graduates who had to work with him. In particular, he hated Bobby Kennedy who, he felt, was his main competitor.The American Dream of the title refers to the President’s dream to create the Great Society, a society of a more just America with the eradication of poverty and inequalities. This American Dream turned into the American Nightmare with the war in Vietnam which destroyed both the dream and the President and forced him to withdraw his candidacy for a final term as President. This was the tragic end of a man with his ambitions and brilliant political skills.

  6. Mr. Nc Shackley

    A great biography of one of the greatest Presidents of the twentieth century. Lyndon Johnson, whether people like it or not, has left an indelible mark on American society with his programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, his tough and admirable stance on civil rights, and, in a very different way – his war in Vietnam.Doris Kearns Goodwin, who first met Johnson while a student at Harvard, and became close to him in his later life, has written a book that is much a memoir of her times with the man as it is a general overview of his life. Other reviewers have complained that her study of Johnson is too psychological, and places too much importance on linking his childhood experiences to his later life. I strongly disagree. Too many biographies of important people seem to gloss over their childhood, but understanding a person’s childhood is paramount in understanding how it shaped their outlook on life. Another common complaint of this book is that Goodwin is not critical enough of Johnson, but again, anyone who has read this book properly will know this is simply not true. Goodwin time and time again highlights Johnson’s flaws – his tendency to withdraw from competition if he felt there was the slightest chance of him losing, his childlike love of power, and his inability to admit where he went wrong. If anything, I believe the author does not praise Johnson high enough.Vietnam of course was a mistake, no one in their right mind would claim otherwise, but domestically, Johnson was an undeniably outstanding President. People have time and time again claimed that Vietnam was the main factor that undermined Johnson’s Presidency, which I agree with, but I also think the other big mistake Johnson made was becoming President after Kennedy. Lacking his predecessor’s good looks, charm and charisma, Johnson was never going to win over the American people in the way that Kennedy did. But his ingenious negotiating skills, his concern for the country’s poor, and his stance on civil rights that saw him do more for African Americans than any other President in history barring Lincoln, means that Johnson was more than a worthy successor. His Great Society programs, while not as successful as he would have hoped, still helped in the fight against poverty. Even with Vietnam, many contemporary historians contend he had fewer options than was believed at the time, and the way Nixon initially handled the war before pulling out shows that Johnson should not be judged so harshly on the subject as he has been.A beautifully written tribute to a great President and an equally fascinating character.

  7. N. Friedman

    Found it well written but there were parts that were too wordy. I have enjoyed other works by the author more than this one.

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