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Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President Hardcover – July 24, 2007
During a forty-year career in politics, Vice President Dick Cheney has been involved in some of the most consequential decisions in recent American history. He was one of a few select advisers in the room when President Gerald Ford decided to declare an end to the Vietnam War. Nearly thirty years later, from the presidential bunker below the White House in the moments immediately following the attacks of September 11, 2001, he helped shape the response: America's global war on terror.
Yet for all of his influence, the world knows very little about Dick Cheney. The most powerful vice president in U.S. history has also been the most secretive and guarded of all public officials. "Am I the evil genius in the corner that nobody ever sees come out of his hole?" Cheney asked rhetorically in 2004. "It's a nice way to operate, actually."
Now, in Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President, New York Times bestselling author and Weekly Standard senior writer Stephen F. Hayes offers readers a groundbreaking view into the world of this most enigmatic man. Having had exclusive access to Cheney himself, Hayes draws upon hundreds of interviews with the vice president, his boyhood friends, political mentors, family members, reticent staffers, and senior Bush administration officials, to deliver a comprehensive portrait of one of the most important political figures in modern times.
The wide range of topics Hayes covers includes Cheney's withdrawal from Yale; his early run-ins with the law; the incident that almost got him blackballed from working in the Ford White House; his meteoric rise to congressional leadership; his opposition to removing Saddam Hussein from power after the first Gulf War; the solo, cross-country drive he took after leaving the Pentagon; his selection as Bush's running mate; his commanding performance on 9/11; the aggressive intelligence and interrogation measures he pushed in the aftermath of those attacks; the necessity of the Iraq War; the consequences of mistakes made during and after that war; and intelligence battles with the CIA and their lasting effects. With exhaustive reporting, Hayes shines a light into the shadows of the Bush administration and finds a very different Dick Cheney from the one America thinks it knows.
- Print length592 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperCollins
- Publication dateJuly 24, 2007
- Dimensions6 x 2.62 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100060723467
- ISBN-13978-0060723460
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
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About the Author
Stephen F. Hayes is a senior writer for the Weekly Standard and the author of the New York Times bestseller The Connection: How al Qaeda's Collaboration with Saddam Hussein Has Endangered America. He has been a commentator on many television and radio broadcasts, including the Today show, Meet the Press, the Diane Rehm Show, Fox News Sunday, the O'Reilly Factor, and CNN's Late Edition. His writing has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Wall Street Journal, The National Review, and the New York Post. He lives on the Chesapeake Bay with his wife and two children.
Product details
- Publisher : HarperCollins; 1st edition (July 24, 2007)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 592 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0060723467
- ISBN-13 : 978-0060723460
- Item Weight : 2.08 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 2.62 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,312,999 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #150 in Cultural Policy
- #6,730 in Political Leader Biographies
- #7,687 in Political Science (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book informative, revealing, and matter-of-fact. They describe it as interesting, entertaining, and an objective read on one of the more polarizing figures. Readers also praise the author as a great writer.
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Customers find the book informative and easy to read. They say it's revealing of the events of 9/11 and how the Bush White House handled it. Readers also mention the book is thorough and provides an excellent look at how Cheney got there. Overall, they say it's interesting and worth the time to read.
"...Overall, this is a superb look into the inner political machinery of the Republican Party over the past three decades, which should appeal to fair-..." Read more
"...to leadership positions, because of his reputation for fairness, competence and discreteness...." Read more
"...Erudite, succinct, a man of few words but of tremendous action, a bookworm that always was reading and collecting facts to base his decisions on...." Read more
"...It was especially revealing of the events of 9/11 and how the Bush Whitehouse handled it, gave me new respect for both Bush & Cheney...." Read more
Customers find the book interesting, objective, and entertaining. They say the author does an excellent job of showing us the inner workings of one of the most polarizing figures.
"...He is extremely capable and light on his feet in interviews with the single exception of his famous mis-speaking that Saddam Hussein had "..." Read more
"...Worth the read." Read more
"...I found this book informative and entertaining while providing rarely-seen insights into the background and character of one of American's best Vice..." Read more
"...Overall it is a very interesting look at Cheney's life and worth the time to read." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and well-written. They also say the author is a great writer.
"...flaws, though, especially given the book's informativeness and easy readability...." Read more
"...The book is easy reading and very informative. It is one of the rare instances..." Read more
"...So sad really. I thought the author was a great writer and did a suburb job, sorry he had such a pitiful tale to share...." Read more
"This book is really easy to read and really simplifies the history behind some of the big events over the last 25 years." Read more
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Hayes is interested in neither gossip nor dirt. If you want that, you'll have to find a different book. Nor is it accurate to say that Hayes offers little new information. I had not known, for example, that Cheney went from being a Yale dropout and electrical-company lineman (with two drunk driving arrests) to White House insider in just a decade. If a man capable of such improbable progress fascinates you; if you do not want your preconceptions confirmed, either for or against the man; if you are curious how the "most powerful and controversial vice president" in American history came to assume that title; if you are convinced that a man ought to be judged by how he explains himself rather than by conspiracy theories; if you want to learn about the Vice President's moral and intellectual development and if you believe that it is possible, even for your political opponents, to act from moral and intellectual principle; then this is the book for you.
Hayes is a political journalist, and writes like one. As a consequence, the book is not without its faults. It is more of an "oral" biography, depending largely upon interviews, than a "literary" one, depending upon documents. Similarly, it is not scholarly biography, which might supply more background information on events, movements, and the lesser figures in Cheney's life. Because the focus is exclusively on Cheney, things get dropped without explanation. Hayes discusses Cheney's disagreement with Henry Kissinger over whether President Ford should meet with Alexander Solzhenitsyn, for example, but never reports the outcome. (Ford declined to meet with him.) These are small flaws, though, especially given the book's informativeness and easy readability. Overall, this is a superb look into the inner political machinery of the Republican Party over the past three decades, which should appeal to fair-minded opponents and supporters of Vice President Cheney alike.
In 1969, he went to work for Donald Rumsfeld in the Nixon Administration and by 1975, he was Chief of Staff for President Ford. When Ford lost the 1976 election to Jimmy Carter, Cheney returned to Wyoming and, in 1978, was elected as Wyoming's sole member of the House of Representatives. Ironically, his degree from the University of Wyoming was far more helpful there than a Yale degree would have been. It was during that campaign that he suffered his first heart attack. He was 37. His Congressional career was highly successful and he was in line to be Speaker of the House when President George Bush asked him to become Secretary of Defense in the wake of the failure of the John Tower nomination. His famous discretion was in full display during an Evans and Novak TV interview after he had been offered the job but had not yet accepted it. They discussed possible candidates to replace Tower and Cheney said not a word. Novak had to scrap the interview tape the next day when Cheney was announced as the nominee.
The history of his time in the second Bush Administration is more familiar but has been grossly distorted by the hostile press. Some of this was due to the reluctance of the Bush staff to see Cheney on TV. He is extremely capable and light on his feet in interviews with the single exception of his famous mis-speaking that Saddam Hussein had "reconstituted" nuclear weapons in the run up to the Iraq War. It was a rare slip. This biography provids a rare view of this private man. His reticence is unusual in a politician and his reputation will recover after the slings and arrows of contemporary politics fade. He is one of the most important political leaders of the past 50 years and the biography should be required reading for anyone who wishes a full understanding of the post-Vietnam era of American government.
