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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
45 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nobody's perfect but everyone's got a story!,
By
This review is from: The Perfect Wife: The Life and Choices of Laura Bush (Hardcover)
Gerhart's book is neither a puff piece nor a hatchet job. Readers seeking either will be disappointed. Gerhart instead presents a balanced, factual account of Laura Bush. And if you read between the lines, you will realize she's more complex than she appears.First, as other reviewers noted, the most astounding piece of Laura's history is her car accident at age seventeen. There's no evidence that she had been drinking, yet she mysteriously ran a very visible stop sign. Even more mysteriously, the city declined to prosecute. She didn't even get a traffic tickert for running a stop sign and smashing into a truck, instantly killing the driver. Later she realized she had killed a good friend. I can't help wondering where Laura Welch (her maiden name) would be today if she had been charged with involuntary manslaughter. Would she have gone on become an SMU sorority girl? A teacher and librarian? And while Laura never talks about the "accident," there must have been long-lasting impact. Did this experience contribute to her shy, self-effacing qualities? Relatedly, we get a sense of the Bush family dyamics. In his younger days, Bush did his share of drinking and partying. Laura had memories of her tragic accident. when Twins Jenna and Barbara grow up to be self-absorbed, uncontrollable brats. An analyst would have a field day with this family. And there's the unspoken question. How does Laura Bush, a smart woman with mostly liberal friends, separate her husband's political persona from her own values? She does what she can and doesn't even try to impinge on her husband's territory. We also learn about Laura Bush's book programs, where she invites authors to read and contribute. Most authors, being liberals, are reluctant to accept, but soon they are won over by Laura's intellect. She's a real reader. And she's hardly a doormat. Barbara Bush would be a formidable mother-in-law but Laura avoids yielding. Nor does she take the easy way out. Barbara's issue was literacy, so Laura makes it clear her approach will be different. I'm reminded of stories of another big Texan president, Lyndon Johnson Indeed, Laura refers to Johnson when she compares herself to other first ladies. Like Laura, Lady Bird knew when to push and when to back off, and she retained her own integrity. After reading the book, it's hard to see how Laura and George came together so successfuly. They're opposite in many ways. Gerhart hints of disagreement on key political issues. Laura reads; George doesn't. Laura is devoted to her children; George flew to Florida for a planned vacation while Jenna underwent an emergency appendectomy. In the end, Perfect Wife isn't about politics. It's about a family that, with less wealth and public scrutiny, might be termed dysfunctional.
23 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Buy this book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Perfect Wife: The Life and Choices of Laura Bush (Hardcover)
This book was fascinating. The Perfect Wife is well written, well researched, insightful and informative. Ann Gerhart is able to place Laura Bush in context for us; through every chapter she delineates how the personal and the public coexist within a complex person. Laura Bush seems stereotypical of a certain sort of southern woman, but as we know, stereotypes are confining in their lack of dimension. The Perfect Wife ably shows us how Laura Bush is not one-dimensional, rather, she is an intellectual surrounded with stacks of books at her side, she has had friends who are Democrats (and hippies, back in the day), she has known tragedy first-hand, and, like many wives and mothers, is at times annoyed by her spouse and offspring (but is too well-mannered to ever say so in public.) I loved this book - I never thought I could relate to a "first lady" (or a perfect wife... ) but after reading this, I'm rethinking many expectations.
19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Nuanced and thoughtful,
By
This review is from: The Perfect Wife: The Life and Choices of Laura Bush (Hardcover)
I don't really understand why so many of the earlier reviews of this book are so negative. Apparently many admirers of Mrs. Bush want a portrait that will admit of no shadings of character at all. This is a nuanced and thoughtful book, not at all unfavorable to Mrs. Bush, if you read it with an open mind. Clearly Mrs. Bush has not had an easy or uncomplicated life; and clearly, also, she is a woman who does not let much of her inner life show. The vehicular manslaughter episode when she was 17, for instance, would be enough to irretrievably affect many people for their whole life. Mrs. Bush, however, managed to "move on," as they say, and within weeks to return to her high school routine and from that on to college. To do that takes a person capable of erecting some very powerful defenses. That Mrs. Gerhart is able to penetrate those defenses at all, and show us Mrs. Bush as a real person, with both strengths and flaws (rather than as the waving, smiling china doll which so many of her fans apparently prefer to see her as) is a credit to her as a writer.
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