Richard Nixon Memoir



RN: The Memoirs Of Richard Nixon User Review - Kirkus 'I intended to play the role of the President right to the hilt and right to the end.' Thus RN, whose words read less like memos here than they did in the newspaper excerpts and more like the last. Hi all, just checking in to say I ran across a bunch of my short stories and had a fun time reading them again! It brought back laughter and memories, reminding me of when I wrote each one. I may just put a story collection together, leaning more to the Ray Bradbury influences from my childhood.

Overview

Latest book on nixon
“Informative, explicit, even suspense-ridden.…An important source for students of the Nixon presidency.” —The New York Times
Former President Richard Nixon's bestselling autobiography is an intensely personal examination of his life, public career, and White House years. With startling candor, Nixon reveals his beliefs, doubts, and behind-the-scenes decisions, shedding new light on his landmark diplomatic and domestic initiatives, political campaigns, and historic decision to resign from the presidency.
Memoirs, spanning Nixon’s formative years through his presidency,reveals the personal side of Richard Nixon. Witness his youth, college years, and wartime experiences, events which would shape his outward philosophies and eventually his presidency—and shape our lives. Follow his meteoric rise to national prominence and the great peaks and depths of his presidency.
Throughout his career Richard Nixon made extensive notes about his ideas, conversations, activities, meetings. During his presidency, from November 1971 until April 1973 and again in June and July 1974, he kept an almost daily diary of reflections, analyses, and perceptions. These notes and diary dictations, quoted throughout this book, provide a unique insight into the complexities of the modern presidency and the great issues of American policy and politics.

Richard Nixon Memoirs Signed

Six Crises
AuthorRichard M. Nixon
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreMemoir
PublisherDoubleday
Publication date
1962
Media typeHardback
ISBN9780671706197
Followed byRN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon

Six Crises is the first book written by Richard Nixon, who later became the 37thpresident of the United States. It was published in 1962, and it recounts his role in six major political situations. Nixon wrote the book in response to John F. Kennedy's Pulitzer Prize–winning Profiles in Courage, which had greatly improved Kennedy's public image.[1][2][3]

Background and writing[edit]

Six Crises was Nixon's response to the John F. Kennedy book, Profiles in Courage (1955), which described the courage of eight US Senators.[2][3] Kennedy sent Nixon a copy of his book, for which Nixon thanked him the next day.[1] In 1961, following his 1960 presidential defeat to Kennedy, Nixon was encouraged by Mamie Eisenhower to write a book about his experiences. On April 20, he visited Kennedy in the White House where Kennedy urged him to write a book; he said that doing so would raise the public image of any public man. Nixon met with a Doubleday book editor the same month.[4]

Like Kennedy, Nixon used a ghostwriter for much of his book. The primary such writer was reportedly Charles Lichenstein.[5] Years later, Nixon's editor at Doubleday, Kenneth McCormick, recounted: 'I enjoyed working with him on 'Six Crises.' He had the concept for the book. He had the whole thing in his head, but he said, 'I'm not much of a writer,' and I said, 'I know.' So Nixon talked the book into a tape recorder and another writer came in to help. Then Nixon said, 'Why don't I try the chapter on defeat? In the course of doing this I think I've learned to write.' Well, he wrote that chapter himself, and it was fine. He really was an example of someone who could learn.'[6]

Contents[edit]

Pat Nixon

The book is organized around the titular six stressful circumstances.

Alger Hiss case[edit]

In 1948, Nixon was a member of the United States House of Representatives serving on the House Un-American Activities Committee, which was investigating communism in the United States. He first rose to national prominence when the committee considered accusations that Alger Hiss, a high-ranking United States Department of State official, was a communist spy for the Soviet Union, allegations that remain a source of controversy.

Fund crisis and Checkers speech[edit]

In 1952, as a member of the United States Senate, Nixon was the vice presidential running mate of Republican presidential nominee Dwight Eisenhower. After he was accused during the campaign of having an improper political fund, he saved his political career and his spot on Eisenhower's ticket by making a nationally broadcast speech, commonly known as the Checkers speech. In the speech, he denied the charges and famously stated he would not be giving back one gift his family had received: a little dog named Checkers.

Eisenhower's heart attack[edit]

In 1955, while Nixon was vice president, President Eisenhower suffered a serious heart attack; during the next several weeks, Nixon was effectively an informal 'acting president'.

Richard

Jimmy Carter

Attack by a mob in Venezuela[edit]

In 1958, Nixon and his wife embarked on a goodwill tour of South America; while in Venezuela, their limousine was attacked by a pipe-wielding mob.

Kitchen debate in Moscow[edit]

In 1959, while still vice president, Nixon traveled to Moscow to engage in an impromptu debate with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. The debate took place in a mock kitchen that was intended to show Soviet citizens how ordinary American families lived, and came to be known as the Kitchen Debate.

Loss in 1960 presidential campaign[edit]

While finishing his second term as vice president, Nixon became the Republican presidential nominee; in the 1960 United States presidential election, he lost an extremely close race to Senator John F. Kennedy.

Commercial performance[edit]

Six Crises was a best seller at the time.[7] Sales were of over 300,000 copies and it was excerpted at length in LIFE magazine.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abMatthews, Christopher (1997). Kennedy & Nixon: the rivalry that shaped postwar America. Simon and Schuster. p. 106. ISBN0-684-83246-1.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  2. ^ abDelson, Rudolph (November 10, 2009). 'Literary Vices, with Rudolph Delson: Richard Nixon's 'Six Crises''. The Awl. Archived from the original on February 27, 2011. Retrieved February 22, 2011.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  3. ^ abRoper, Jon (1998). 'Richard Nixon's Political Hinterland: The Shadows of JFK and Charles de Gaulle'. Presidential Studies Quarterly. Retrieved February 22, 2011.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  4. ^Nixon (1962) Introduction to Six Crises.
  5. ^[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/stories/nixon17.htm 'Behind the Statesman, A Reel Nixon Endures', Washington Post, June 17, 1997.
  6. ^'Publishing's Kenneth McCormick, 91, Dies', New York Times, June 29, 1997.
  7. ^[https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jul/19/richard-nixon-book-memoirs-watergate-1989 'Richard Nixon plans 'most personal book ever'], The Guardian, July 19, 1989.
  8. ^Jonathan Aiken, Nixon: A Life, p. 348.

Julie Nixon Eisenhower

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