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The Reagans: Portrait of a Marriage [Hardcover]

Anne Edwards (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0312285000 978-0312285005 June 17, 2003 1st
He was an actor, newly divorced, whose controversial tenure as president of the Screen Actors Guild was drawing more attention than his film career. She was a contract player at MGM, unmarried and rapidly growing too old to play the starlet. It was time, she decided, to settle down and become Mrs. Somebody Important. So Nancy Davis contrived an introduction to Ronald Reagan, and the Reagans’ march into history began.

The Reagans is their story, a penetrating portrayal of one of the most powerful couples of the twentieth century. Distinguished biographer Anne Edwards, who wrote the seminal book on Ronald Reagan's budding years, Early Reagan: The Rise to Power, now paints the first in-depth, intimate portrait of the man who became our fortieth president and the woman without whom he might never have reached such heights.

It was a dramatic love story from the start: Nancy was always first in Reagan’s thoughts, and he was paramount in Nancy’s actions. This obsessional love, however, had a darker side for the four Reagan children. Anne Edwards brings the Reagans’ dysfunctional family life into sharp focus, along with a fascinating array of supporting players---from Reagan’s evangelistic mother, Nelle, to Nancy’s adoptive father, Dr. Loyal Davis (said to be “right of Atilla the Hun”), as well as Frank Sinatra, Lew Wasserman, Barry Goldwater, Gerald Ford, and other key figures in government and entertainment.

Few women in the twentieth century had as much power as did Nancy Reagan, and few were so widely mistrusted and disliked. Anne Edwards shows you a side of Nancy that has never before been revealed. As Reagan rose to power, Nancy defended her husband’s interests with both opponents and supporters---and then took on the even more difficult battle to maintain her husband’s dignity through his descent into Alzheimer’s disease.

The Reagans is an original and mesmerizing look at a presidential marriage that is every bit as interesting and important as that of John and Abigail Adams or Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Even in his 70s, Ronald Reagan would leave sentimental love notes for his wife, Nancy: "For My Mommy Poo... Love Poppa." In her latest book, prolific biographer Edwards (Ever After: Diana and the Life She Led) paints a portrait of the Reagans as completely in love. From the day they married, Nancy devoted her every moment to ensuring her husband's happiness. He, in turn, relied completely on Nancy and trusted her wholly. Those close to the couple admit that Reagan's success in politics would not have occurred without Nancy's constant devotion and involvement. Throughout his governorship of California, his presidency, the assassination attempt, his meetings with Gorbachev-Nancy's sentiments, advice and complaints figured prominently, to the extent that the president of the United States rearranged his schedule according to the advice of Nancy's favorite astrologer. But according to Edwards, this romantic picture came at a price. The Reagans' children yearned for their parents' love and acceptance, but found that the couple's all-encompassing relationship did not include them. While Edwards celebrates the Reagans' achievements, she does not shy away from presenting the darker, grimmer side of their life and does a wonderful job of fully fleshing out the convoluted and tortured emotions that define this famous family. In all, she offers an engaging yet honest look at the human experience played out on the public stage. 32 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

The subtitle is a bit misleading. Portrait suggests either a crisp photograph or an impressionistic painting. This is neither: all the body parts are in the right places, but what we see is not as sharp as a photo nor as textured as a painting. Veteran celebrity biographer Edwards (Streisand, Hepburn, Garland) offers a by-the-numbers bio that probably won't deliver much new information to anyone who has read previous books about the Reagans; the last chapters do fill in a few details of the couple's life after the former president's diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. Despite considerable research, including personal interviews--Maureen Reagan was among the subjects--and time spent at various libraries looking at original sources, Edwards curiously avoids making connections or drawing conclusions from the facts she presents. The Reagans' devotion to each other is, of course, legendary, and most people know that the family-values president's own family was dysfunctional, to say the least. Although readers get the "what" of these relationships (often seasoned with quotes from the principals' own books), not much of a case is made for the "why" except in the most general terms. Why did Reagan let Nancy relegate his older children to second-class citizenship status? Why were the children so estranged from each other? Edwards is a recognizable name in the celebrity-bio business, which may sell the book, but it is a serviceable job at best. Ilene Cooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press; 1st edition (June 17, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312285000
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312285005
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,144,503 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Nice try, but is this a true portrait?, October 23, 2005
By 
Marvin D. Pipher (Houston, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Reagans: Portrait of a Marriage (Hardcover)
This book takes a look at the lives of Nancy and Ronald Reagan both while in and out of political life with emphasis on the Reagans, themselves, rather than on the political events of which they were a part. The book clearly reflects the time and effort expended by the author in researching and writing it and appears to contain a great deal of authoritative information concerning the Reagans. Much of it is in the form of quotes from those who worked with or for the Reagans or otherwise interacted with them. These are woven into a fairly comprehensive and persuasive story.

Even so, the book seems to fall short of its title. It is not so much a "portrait" of the Reagans' "marriage" as it is a "connect the dots picture" of the Reagans life together as seen by those outside the marriage. Unfortunately, there are many missing dots and those are the ones which would reveal the more human side of the Reagans and the personal relationships and interactions between them. Clearly, there are enough dots (observations of Nancy or Ron, made by those who knew or worked with either one or both of them) but most bear little or no relationship to their marriage. Only in the final chapter does one finally get to see the true depth of their feelings for one another. In my view, rather than being a "team" comprised of:1) a husband who because of his Christian upbringing and his mother's teachings is desperately trying to hold onto his second wife, and 2) a cold calculating wife willing to do anything to advance herself through her husband's achievements; theirs was one of America's great love stories.

However, with all the information presented to the reader, each reader can easily form his or her own mental image of what the Reagan's married life may have been like. The problem is that from all accounts Nancy was an entirely different person in the eyes of Ronald Reagan than she was to virtually everyone else. And the opposite, in many cases, is also true. So if this is all there is, we may never be able to get a true portrait of the Reagan marriage. Nice try though.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A good read...but not much new here, January 6, 2004
This review is from: The Reagans: Portrait of a Marriage (Hardcover)
First, let me start off by saying that Anne Edwards "Early Reagan" is one of my favorite books about Reagan. Her latest, The Reagans: Portrait of a Marriage" is a good read but there really isn't much new information Reagan fans and scholars don't already know about these remarkable people. My biggest criticism of this book is that I believe Edwards overdoes the old stereotype that Nancy wore the pants and was the brains behind the man and his rise to power and what a dragon lady she was. Parts of the book are very unfair, in my opinion, to Nancy and come pretty close to doing a hack job. In that regard, it's disappointing. Still, Edwards knows her subjects very well and the book is very easy to read and uncluttered. The last chapter does bring the story of Reagan's life up to date with his struggle with Alzheimers. Overall, a good read about two fascinating people and their loving relationship.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Only a slight step above a Kitty Kelley book, January 2, 2012
Obvious bias against the Reagans. Compliments wives of FDR and Wilson for their strong support of their husbands, but then criticizes Nancy Reagan for exactly the same thing. Compliments Jackie Kennedy for her refurbishment of the White House (on government money), but then criticizes Nancy Reagan for her desire to restore the White House after the Carters and Nixons. She did it through private donations just as she procured the infamous china set. Also with private donations.

Author needs to lookup the real reason Reagan was sworn in as CA's Govenor. It was done to stop Pat Brown's rushing through of last minute judicial appts and not from the advice of an astrologer. Book borders on tabloid journalism complete with interviews with unnamed people.

Do not recommend this book.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
ne evening in mid-February 1952 Edith Luckett Davis and Dr. Loyal Davis, parents of thirty-year-old Hollywood contract player Nancy Davis, were sitting down to eat dinner at their Scottsdale, Arizona, home when the telephone rang. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
family quarters
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
White House, Ronald Reagan, United States, Los Angeles, Oval Office, Camp David, New York, Rancho del Cielo, Air Force One, Nancy Reagan, Jane Wyman, Michael Deaver, General Electric, Loyal Davis, Soviet Union, Yearling Row, George Bush, Richard Nixon, Beverly Hills, Larry Speakes, Nancy Davis, World War, San Francisco, San Onofre, Barbara Bush
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