18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Personal Perspective, January 15, 2003
This review is from: The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush, An Inside Account (Hardcover)
My feelings are the opposite of the "Reader from Washington" who reviews Frum's book here. I in fact DID want the personal perspective of a White House staffer and that's what I got in this excellently written narrative. If anything, I would have traded some of Frum's political analysis (perceptive as it is) for still more anecdotes.
The account of the 9/11 experience of the White House staffers by itself makes the book a worthwhile read. Kaddish on a PalmPilot!
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40 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing, January 8, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush, An Inside Account (Hardcover)
While "The Right Man" does offer a fair amount of insights into the Bush Administration (I liked the ground/passing game analogy to describe the relationship between Hughes and Rove), I must say I was a bit disappointed--even though it is still worth reading. This book has been hyped as an "insider's account" of the Bush Administration, but it reads more like an autobiography of David Frum's brief time in the White House. The Right Man is already a short book, but it would have been better had Frum left out some of his personal anecdotes and concentrated more on the inner-workings of the Administration. I agree with Frum's conclusion that Bush is the "right man" for president, but I fear Frum might not have been the right man to write this book (please forgive the pun).
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30 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Well wrinten, thoughful and insightful look at Bush WH, January 9, 2003
This review is from: The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush, An Inside Account (Hardcover)
This is the first major work by a true insider from the Bush White House and it paints a very detailed and vivid picture of the nature of Bush's approach to both the Presidency as well as how his White House staff operates.
Frum is a former Wall Street Journal writer and has written on conservative social and political issues. He worked in the White House as a speech writer, focused on economic matters initially and then refocused on international issues after September 11th. While he's philosophically aligned with Bush he nevertheless was somewhat uninformed about Bush both personally and politically when he first appeared on the national scene (weren't we all) and somewhat ambivalent about him when he went to work for the Bush Administration. That sense of ambivalence comes through subtly throughout the book and lends it, to my mind, an additional layer of credence.
The boom is very detailed and wide ranging. It covers policy, Bush's personal leadership style, his political philosophy, the usual White House intrigues--pretty standard stuff for this sort of effort.
Several tings set this book apart, however. One is the simple dearth of genuine, detailed insider White House reporting that has emerged on this administration to date. Frum deftly explains that this is a function of several factors--this White House's penchant for security, the unusually close knit operating structure in the White House as compared to, say, the Clinton era, but most especially the incredible loyalty George Bush naturally inspires. Frum gives this penchant for loyalty the full treatment and it's a fascinating phenomenon to behold in this day and age.
Another truly interesting facet is the ways in which the deep Christian fundamentalism of many bushies affects both the policy aspects of the administration but also--much more interestingly to my mind--the general day to day operations and culture of the White House. Frum also gives this the full treatment and it is, again, a fascinating look at this extraordinary aspect of the current administration.
Frum also gives us an insider's insight into the wiles and intrigues of Washington politics. This is best exemplified in the "Axis of Evil" phrase, which Frum essentially originated (though his actual phrasing was "Axis of Hatred" modified to evil by Bush himself) and the aftermath of Frum's getting "credit" for it.
The only negative I'd voice--and it's why this gets 4 rather than 5 stars--is that Frum inserts himself into the meat of the book a bit too much for my taste. This is neither billed as or written as a memoir as much as an insider takes on the WH--not on Frum. It's a minor quibble but nevertheless a bit less focus on Frum's personal situations would have been welcome once his qualifications, bonafides and so on were established. It's not so much that what he writes isn't interesting (he tales about being a foreign national (Frum's Canadian) working in the White House and the complications that this causes are often interesting and even entertaining, but nevertheless distracting from the main focus of the book.
In the end though it's what he learned about Bush and what he came to believe about his abilities and destiny that are key, and they form genuinely fresh and enlightening look at the man, who he really is, and what he really stands for. What he has to say won't in general shock anybody who's read the title of the book, it's nevertheless firm and thoughtful insight about a man whose destiny is so critical and about whom we really, truly know very little.
Highly recommended.
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