Alongside Nixon and his critics are a few books by Nixon’s collaborators and aides. The postumously published The Haldeman Diaries are an indispensible resource for historians that far eclipses Haldeman’s The Ends of Power. Less meticulous, but a still interesting sampling of Nixon administration mentality, was From: The President, edited by Bruce Oudes. Henry Kissinger’s ponderously large, three volume memoirs have numerous valuable commentaries about Richard Nixon and especially, his foreign policy, must be included in any serious study of Nixon.
Most of the books produced by the Watergate conspirators tend to be at least as self-serving as Nixon’s account without the benefit of Nixon’s selectively incisive intellect. Dean’s Blind Ambition is probably among the worst of the lot but none of them, often written hastily in the face of mounting legal bills and fines, add much substance to that covered by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. John Ehrlichman’s cynicism is occasionally amusing as is G. Gordon Liddy, though often unintentionally. Of lesser figures, little need be said.
Next, Part II. Nixon in his own words:
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Lexington Green:
August 25th, 2006 at 9:33 pm
Nixon is a very major figure. You are the only other person I have seen mention that, like FDR, Nixon was on five national tickets and won four times. Unlike FDR, in the middle of this stretch, he had a political crash-and-burn, double defeats in ’60 and 62. Also like FDR, he was a president who is deeply misunderstood, because he was complicated and devious. Both men came into the presidency when the country was in the midst of a disaster which threatened the foundations of our political order. 1932 and 1968 were rock-bottom years for America. Both, in effect, put out political forest fires and saved the country.
I have not read most of the books you mention, but I like very much Stephen Ambrose’s first volume of his trilogy on Nixon, which goes to 1962.
mark:
August 25th, 2006 at 10:07 pm
hi Lex,
Thanks for bringing the point about FDR up – the difference between the public reputation of the two men is stark and to some degree, demonstrates the effect of personality on politics.
FDR’s political accomplishments were larger but Nixon’s were large enough to merit comparison. Both were devious, vindictive, manipulative, prone to playing politics ” rough” and determined to expand the powers of the executive. FDR however was radiantly charismatic, optimistic and confident while Nixon was, while combative and determined, an insecure and paranoid man, often ill at ease in social situations. These qualities yielded political reactions.
I’m not sure if I read Ambrose on Nixon ( have his book on Eisenhower on the shelf) or not – I read so many Nixon books in a short period of time when doing research in grad school that some of them have blurred together. Will check it out though
Lexington Green:
August 26th, 2006 at 6:34 pm
Ambrose on Eisenhower is excellent, too. I like Ambrose’s books from before he got famous.
RMN was what the country wanted in 1968. Some guy who was not a nice guy, to reimpose some order. A tough guy. But the country was not yet ready to truly turn to the right. FDR was what the country needed in 1932. Somebody who was optimistic, who could see a way out of the swamp. I agree Nixon’s political achievements are not in the same league as FDRs. The only challengers for that title are Washington and Lincoln.
I read somewhere about somebody in Washington in the mid 1950s saying the two guys in this town who are going to be president some day are Richard Nixon and Lyndon Johnson. The reason? They were the two guys in town who knew every single county party chairman by name and stayed in touch with them. They routinely did the hard, grinding work of building up a national political base. Both guys were pluggers, marathon racers, not sprinters.
I’m currently reading a book called The Politics of Recovery: Roosevelt’s New Deal. It is very good. It shows what FDR was up to, which was to restore confidence and get the various factions in the country working together, and fending off more radical proposals that would have destroyed the basic underpinnings of our economy. No one is willing to admit that FDR was the greatest conservative president we ever had — he “conserved” democratic capitalism, when most people wanted to give up on one or both of those elements. Similarly, no one wants to admit that Nixon was our greates liberal politician, cementing in place LBJ’s Great Society, and putting in many liberal programs, e.g. the EPA, ending the draft, that could not have been put into place by a Democrat.
We are still to close to both men to understand the magnitude of what they did. FDR is still a polarizing figure. But we may in my lifetime start to see “post-revisionism” on him that gets the story straight.
mark:
August 27th, 2006 at 4:52 am
Again, very incisive comments Lex, we’re in agreement here.
I recall reading somewhere that FDR could recall something like 30,000 ppl by name. Incidentally, that’s around the size of George H.W. Bush’s famous Christmas card list. Nixon, Clinton, FDR and Gingrich all knew/know electoral stats for counties and Congressional districts like avid baseball fans memorized batting averages. Very successful politicians are masters of the data.