From Publishers Weekly
Press secretary to presidents Kennedy and Johnson, Salinger has written an engaging, whirlwind memoir. Both a participant in and an observer of history, he provides intimate glimpses of John Kennedy during the Bay of Pigs invasion and the Cuban missile crisis as well as an eyewitness account of Robert Kennedy's assassination. A child-prodigy pianist, born in San Francisco in 1925 to an American Jewish mining engineer of German descent and a French Catholic mother, Salinger at the age of 19 commanded a ship in the South Pacific during WWII; he served on a Senate antiracketeering committee that helped break Jimmy Hoffa's power and became a U.S. senator from California for five months in 1964. As Paris bureau chief for ABC News, he established back-channel negotiations in the Iranian hostage crisis in 1979, and covered stories ranging from Irish Republican Army terrorism to the Persian Gulf war. Now a vice-chairman of Burson-Marsteller, a PR firm in Washington, D.C., he writes guardedly of his four marriages and of personal tragedies (his son Marc committed suicide in 1977). Of note, Salinger divulges his 1989 meeting in Moscow in which Gorbachev told an American delegation that the Soviets had had 50,000 troops in Cuba in the fall of 1962?five times as many as the U.S. had presumed; Gorbachev also disclosed that Castro had urged Khrushchev to launch a missile attack.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
"One of the best things about writing a memoir," Salinger confesses, "as opposed to a more formal book that covers both history and politics is that the rules aren't as rigid." In general, his memoir's organization reflects this observation, which is not to say that the book is not fascinating. Salinger traces his life from his days as a child piano prodigy to his forays into journalism at the San Franciso Chronicle and Collier's to serving as JFK's press secretary (the story of which is covered in more detail in his earlier With Kennedy) to his 148-day career as an appointed U.S. senator to the assassination of Robert Kennedy to a distinguished career with ABC-TV News and finally to his current position as an international public relations executive. He is candid; he has been married four times and admits his philandering. This is not a book you put down easily. Recommended for all libraries.
-?Chet Hagan, Berks Cty. P.L. System, Pa.Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.