Exploring President Reagan¿s Philosophy and Psychology
When Character Was King is a most unusual book. Let me start by saying what it is not. Although there are many biographical details here, it is definitely not a biography. Although the book explores political ideas, it is not a book about political theory or ideology. Although the book has much history in it, it is not a history. Although the book has many personal observations about President Reagan, it is not a memoir. As close as I can describe it, the book attempts to simultaneously capture what it was like to spend time with President Reagan, explain why he did what he did, and show how his communications affected others. The exposition is mostly by anecdote, rather than by argument. As a result, I found that I improved my understanding of President Reagan quite a bit. That surprised me, because I have read quite a few books about President Reagan, and followed his actions very closely while he was president. The new insights come mostly from two sources: new interviews with people who met President Reagan over the past five decades, and Ms. Noonan¿s own recollections and reflections on what it was like to work with President Reagan. Ms. Noonan is a talented writer, and brings the material together well. The book is highly complimentary of President Reagan, so those who did not like him or what he did will find the book sadly out of balance. Iran-Contra is about the only negative area mentioned, and President Reagan is criticized . . . but in a mild way. Other areas where reasonable people could and do differ (like abortion, women¿s and minority rights, SDI, the Federal deficit, and the broad military build-up) are described as complete triumphs. Those who are great admirers of President Reagan will probably find this book to be the most appealing and emotionally rewarding profile that has been done to date. The book has the extra appeal of taking you into the private places and times where only insiders had everyday access, such as the California ranch, the hospital after the assassination attempt, visits with President Reagan after he was out of office, and the commissioning of the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan by Mrs. Reagan while she was attended by a large group of former White House staffers. There are a lot of speeches reported in the book. Realizing that Ms. Noonan may have helped write some of them made me feel like the speeches should have been pared back, or her role described fully in their development. Integrity is defined by most people as acting in ways that are consistent with your beliefs. That is a high standard that all people wish they could match. Whether a critic or an admirer, you will come away from this book with a better understanding of why and how President Reagan behaved with an extraordinary degree of integrity, representing values that the majority of Americans hold. Here are a few examples of President Reagan¿s beliefs as described in the book: ¿Tell the truth, announce the facts, explain what to do about them and pledge to do it.¿ ¿So he took his mother¿s assumptions -- we must do good -- and added them to his own ambitions.¿ ¿ . . . I¿m going off to war, still true to my precepts: (a) to love what you are doing with all your heart and soul and (b) to believe what you are doing is important.¿ ¿He was humble. He had no sense of entitlement.¿ ¿Skeptic . . . not a cynic.¿ After the assassination attempt, ¿Whatever time he had left was God¿s, would go to God.¿ ¿He saw it [history] as something you could change.¿ ¿He thought women were better than men.¿ ¿I never thought of myself as a great man, just a man committed to great ideas.¿ His legacy: ¿He tried to expand the frontiers of freedom, in a world at peace with itself.¿ Near the end of the book, President George W. Bush describes his first meeting with Russian President Putin, and you can clearly hear echoes of the Reagan-Gorbachev summits. So the
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Overview
No one has ever captured Ronald Reagan like Peggy Noonan. In When Character Was King, Noonan brings her own reflections on Reagan to bear as well as new stories—from Presidents George W. Bush and his father, George H. W. Bush, his Secret Service men and White House colleagues, his wife, his daughter Patti Davis, and his close friends—to reveal the true nature of a man even his opponents now view as a maker of big history. Marked by incisive wit and elegant prose, When Character Was King will both enlighten and move readers. It may well be the last word on Ronald Reagan, not only as a leader but as a man.