16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A colorful and warm portrait of the 41st President, October 27, 2006
Suppose, gentle reader, that you are not a professional writer, and your father suddenly asks you to write a book about his life.
Hmmm, how do you go about it? Where do you start?
Then add one small complication: Your father has been President of the United States.
Doro Bush Koch took on this unprecedented task, surely an offer she could not refuse. Her solution is to write a daughter's-eye portrait of the man and to leave the pontificating about events and policies largely to those actually involved in such things. Her book gives as much space to doormen, cooks and butlers as it does to the likes of Bill Clinton and Mikhail Gorbachev.
No one will be surprised that the former President emerges as a devoted family man, upright, honest and fun-loving. Even his political opponents join in the chorus. George H. W. Bush, now 82 years old and rather lightly regarded by political historians, has inspired an affectionate brief in his own defense.
Doro (her actual name is Dorothy, but the family adopted the shorter form early on) went about her job with zest and efficiency. Her list of interviewees runs to 133 names, and another 167 people sent comments by letter. Half or more of her text consists of verbatim excerpts from their responses.
One could hardly expect a balanced appraisal, given the circumstances of the book's creation. Once you concede that point, the book earns a place on your bookshelf by its folksy personal tone. Doro shows genuine affection for her father, excusing his personality quirks and giving him the benefit of every doubt.
The policy wonks she contacted, friends and enemies alike, praise his good qualities and tend to applaud his performance as President. He is given credit several times, for example, for starting the process of dismantling the Soviet Union and opening up eastern Europe in the late 1980s, surely a debatable point. His opponents are --- again understandably --- depicted as mean-spirited and mendacious. The nasty media take their lumps too.
All this halo-polishing can become a bit tiresome. Perhaps the severest critic involved is Bush himself ("...I think I was maybe a couple of quarts low on charisma"). One admirer put it concisely: "he was a master of the small gesture." He himself admitted that he was not comfortable with "soaring rhetoric."
The most interesting and revealing pages of this book are the excerpts from Bush's private diaries and informal notes to friends. These show us a very human and attractive side of the man's nature.
He was considerate and often witty, even when delivering bad news. Two days before Richard Nixon resigned in 1974, Bush sent him a formal letter suggesting in statesmanlike phrases that he must take that fateful step ("....this letter is made much more difficult because of the gratitude I will always have for you..."). It was a hard thing for Bush to do, but he did it with some style.
Doro has ably presented one side of the "Bush-41" story for the record. Historians and others will surely continue to debate the pros and cons of his Presidency. What she has done that they cannot is to make her father live as a human being. Her emphasis on family doings, horseshoe tournaments, golf and fishing gives her book both color and personality.
--- Reviewed by Robert Finn [...]
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A daughter's loving tribute, December 2, 2006
Doro Bush Koch, the only remaining daughter of George H.W. Bush, was asked to write this personal memoir about her father. Doro, as a loving daughter, is far from objective about her famous dad, but that's what makes this book interesting. She starts out by recounting some history about her great-grandparents and grandparents, includes some anecdotes and incidents from her father's growing-up years, and then continues with his life as a businessman, diplomat, politician, and eventually as President. She is knowledgable about the many issues which her father faced as President, and recounts his triumphs and missteps, complete with attacks on him by political enemies and the press. She also includes many stories by friends and fellow politicians who portray him as a thoughtful and caring man who, even in the midst of his own trials, never failed to reach out to others who were having difficult times. One example of the President's thoughtfulness is that the Bushes would stay at the White House Christmas Eve so that the staff which would accompany them to Camp David for Christmas could spend some holiday time with their families. Koch includes many examples of personal correspondence (his preferred way of communicating) with his children and grandchildren which are very touching and which show that he lived up to his credo of "Faith, Family, and Friends." Along the way, the reader gets glimpses of Doro's other famous relatives, but her father is definitely the focus of this loving tribute.
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