|
| 
enlarge | Author: Ron Suskind Publisher: Harper Category: Book
List Price: $27.95 Buy New: $11.95 You Save: $16.00 (57%)
New (63) Used (28) Collectible (4) from $9.19
Avg. Customer Rating: 57 reviews Sales Rank: 4578
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 432 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.4 x 1.6
ISBN: 0061430625 Dewey Decimal Number: 973.931 EAN: 9780061430626
Publication Date: August 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Very light edgewear to dust jacket, but book is brand new and unread. No marks.
|
| Customer Reviews:
stunning clarity, clear sense of purpose... October 28, 2008 The war on terror has never been broken down so clearly as Ron Suskind has in this engaging, thought provoking book. The author so deftly takes us around the world and weaves the stories of people working to protect the 'idea' of American values as our own government demolishes that hope by it's own arrogance and hunger for power. We are the last great hope of a mankind that is governed by it's own people. Most Americans live in some sort of dangerous bubble, not aware of our Country's influence on the rest of the world that in itself should make this book required reading.
Truth and Hope Survive October 26, 2008 My favorite book of this year, a dramatized - you were there- epic, that is part expose', and part a series of romantic narratives that weave in and out and kept me thumbing back to where the newly reappearing character was last seen. They say there is a novelist hidden in every reporter, and parts certainly had the structure and poetry of a novel - al la LeCarre. The expose' parts, if true, should put people in jail - if not true, Suskind is in trouble, but I'm betting on true - he did not get a Pulitzer for nothing. The more romantic parts spun hopeful stories, where against the horrible conditions of the calamity we humans have created for ourselves there are people struggling together, helping each other because it is the right thing to do. In these places Suskind reminds me of Sarah Chayes who, in "Punishment of Virtue" ,told of the little, but all important. human interactions taking place beneath the awfulness of Afghanistan. This is a book in which those excited about "change" will find both the strongest possible need for it, and the hope that it can succeed.
The saga continues October 24, 2008 Suskind's third book on the Bush Administration is more than a behind the scenes look - it's a narrative - actually a handful of narratives loosely bound together by the "War on Terror" and reads much like a novel and even a screenplay at times. The stories track Benazir Bhutto's final months, an incredibly persistent Chicago attorney tasked with "defending", (and I use the term defending very loosely here), an "enemy combatant" imprisoned at Gitmo, an Afghani transfer student coming to America and several senior members, and ex-members, of the US Intelligence community as they go about making the world a safer place. The last includes a few visits into the Oval Office and the success/failure in simply engaging the current President in the details of critical projects. The good news/bad news for the reader is that each of these narratives is treated to same amount of detail - interesting when following the hunt for the elusive WMD - not so much concerning our Afghani adolescent, who for instance finds out that the Web contains a lot more than shopping sites.
There are nuggets - I'll mention one. If one's opinion is still out concerning the lack of Iraq's WMD, i.e. Intelligence incompetence or a rush to judgment with the use of questionable data, Suskind presents some damning evidence that the Bush administration was not only aware of these "oversights" but manipulated evidence to facilitate their cause for the invasion of Iraq. The hardest to ignore - several meetings, (prior to March '03), between a member of the British intelligence service and a high ranking Iraqi official confirming not only the lack of Iraqi WMD but also highlighting the "game" Saddam was "playing" by threatening the region with these "phantom" WMD.
I don't mean to slight the other narratives. Bhutto's story is memorable in capturing her almost knowingly walking to her assassination. (We know much of her last months because the NSA was tapping her phones.) Another of the Intelligence "stories" tracks the impossible task of infiltrating the global enriched uranium black market. And the Guantanamo tale mentioned above struck a chord with me. The persistence of the attorney - against all odds and the government - simply because she didn't believe what was happening was "right" does give one hope. Also the legal argument finally presented to break the "logjam" down there in Cuba was genius in its simplicity - at least to this non-attorney.
Is this book a must read that will continue to resonate 5 or 10 years from now? Probably not. Some of the narratives are overlong and become repetitious and much like "The One Percent Doctrine", the last 75 pages or so seems rushed. On the other hand "The Way of the World" continues to raise questions about the Bush/Cheney administration's effectiveness in waging its "War on Terror".
to speak is to lie October 13, 2008 Just one more confirmation that the Shrub admin is nothing short of a criminal enterprise. Impeachment followed by a war crimes trial followed by a guilty verdict followed by execution of at least 7 memebers of the enterprise including of course the Shrub.
The Personal Effects of the War on Terror October 7, 2008 Loved this book. It really tells the personal side of the "War on Terror". It shows how it affects people from the President to trial lawyers trying to defend an "enemy combatant" at Guantanamo Bay. It also shows the differences culturally and communication wise between americans and people from the the Middle East. A must read for anyone fascinated with the dynamics of the United States influence in the world.
|
|
| Copyright 2006-07, VeggiePlaza.com | |