Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE LIFE STORY OF AN AMERICAN ORIGINAL, November 18, 2005
It is no secret that New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson is looking to run for the Democratic Presidential Nomination in 2008. When you read his memoir "Between Worlds: The Making of An American Life," you understand the drive, commitment and experience that makes this public servant a top contender for the nation's top job.
The book traces the journey of the son of an American father and Mexican mother, from his childhood in Mexico to Capitol Hill, the United Nations and the Governor's mansion. There probably hasn't been a more qualified Presidential candidate since George Bush the first.
The book is peppered with "Richardson's Rules" which are helpful points for negotiating. Who better to get advice from than someone who has negotiated with the likes of Saddam Hussein and Fidel Castro--and came out on top?
This is a worthy read from a great American. Regardless of your political ideology you'll enjoy it!
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14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing--shallower than anticipated, January 5, 2006
I am a Hispanic on my mother's side, completely disdainful of both the Republican and the Democratic parties for having "sold out" to special interests and betrayed the public trust, and actively interested in "alternative candidates" that might make the leap from being a captive of the machine to being a true representative of the people.
Bill Richardson is undeniably attractive to both Hispanics and to Native Americans, and he moves easily and ably in the Anglo world of energy and environmental politics. As a former UN Ambassador and as a former Secretary of Energy I bought this book eagerly anticipating a "roadmap" for what the author calls the "New Progressivism."
This is not such a roadmap. While I respect the author very much, this book reads more like a dictated and then ghost-edited "formula" book. It communicates absolutely no sense of the over-all challenges facing America and the world, not even in the energy arena. "Peak Oil" is not mentioned in this book, and neither are alternative sources of energy. Global poverty and disease and water scarcity are not mentioned in this book.
While the author does discuss predatory lending in his own state, something he commendably seeks to stop, he seems to have no sense of the global impact of immoral predatory capitalism.
While the author is clearly an exceptional negotiator able to charm dictators, and he provides several admirable stories to support this view, he does not seem to grasp that our foreign policy is "gutted" by our continuing support for 44 dictators.
There are some gems in here, for instance when he notes that Madeline Albright slammed the door shut on the Iranians when they were seeking rapprochement with the US through UN channels.
While the author does not stress the point, he does seem to champion an end to the embargo on Cuba, and a re-opening of a full relationship that should inevitably profit both countries. Perhaps his Mexican heritage has ensured that he heard the Mexican President when he refused to duplicate the US embargo, with the famous words "if I were to say that Cuba was a threat to our national security, 40 million Mexicans would die laughing."
I have plenty of underlining throughout the book, and it was sufficient to warrant my full attention over two flights in and out of Tampa, but I put the book down thinking to myself that the book was a tease, not the main event.
The author says that he has produced over 30 major policy studies for his New Mexican governorship, and I believe it. I'd like to see a serious book by this man, one that addresses the key issues facing America across every Cabinet department, and ends with a chapter on ends and means. To his credit, he is a strong champion of a balance budget.
Nice guy--clearly a strong candidate for Secretary of State. It is not at all clear from this book that he is ready to run for President.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Intriguing Autobiography of A Charismatic Politician, December 25, 2005
This is an intriguing autobiographical account of a charismatic politician of our times. The title is very cleverly chosen; it could well describe his super role as a negotiator par excellence that has taken him to countries that are worlds apart - Castro's Cuba, Saddam Hussein's Iraq, or Kim Jong II's North Korea, amongst others. It is also an introspective description of being caught between worlds in his own multicultural heritage. Born in Pasadena, California, of an American businessman father and a Mexican mother, he grew up in Mexico City, went to a private high school at Middlesex in Massachusetts followed by college at his father's alma mater: Tufts University, outside Boston.
As a child, he eventually triumphed over the struggle of being a gringo in Mexico City and a pancho in Middlesex with the power of his baseball talent. As an adult, he continues to triumph with the power of his personal charisma and political suaveness. Out of these remarkable experiences come the Richardson's rules of negotiations, and perhaps life, that are peppered in the narrative, and summarized again at the end of the book.
He has served as eight-term congressman for his adopted state of New Mexico, as our ambassador to the United Nations, and in cabinet posts in the Clinton administration (as Energy Secretary). His father was a Republican, a fan and a friend of President Eisenhower, but he himself has evolved to be a star in the Democratic Party. He currently serves as the popular (Democratic) Governor of New Mexico. Mexico has awarded him with the Aztec Eagle Award, the highest award given to a foreigner and he has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize four times. Our global world village is rapidly shrinking but often still sadly warring, only sometimes with nuclear ramifications. We will increasingly need statesmen of this caliber and this vision, and the book leaves you with the impression that Richardson certainly has the intense desire, the committed passion, the tolerant stomach, the immense energy and the demonstrated talent to build these bridges, and decipher these different ideologies - across party lines, national boundaries or continental divides. Call it handshake or bear-hug diplomacy!
The book is extremely well written, and as it shuttles us across the globe on his different missions, it describes in adequate detail as to capture the purpose, the drama and the history of the event, without getting too technical or complicated.
Richardson carefully avoids addressing the question of his widely rumored bid (as of December 2005) for the Presidency in 2008, as the first Hispanic-American for that office. If he decides to run, the book will certainly be ready for more chapters. But the current version of Between Worlds is already very enjoyable reading. As it takes us behind some of the headline events of our times, it provides some interesting insight into the making and thinking of a rising, fascinating and super-charged American politician.
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