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The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President Book

The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President
The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President, , The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President has a rating of 5 stars
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  • The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President
  • Written by author Taylor Branch
  • Published by Simon & Schuster Audio, September 2009
  • A GROUNDBREAKING BOOK about the modern presidency, The Clinton Tapes invites readers into private dialogue with a gifted, tormented, resilient President of the United States. Here is what President Clinton thought and felt but could not say in publ
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A GROUNDBREAKING BOOK about the modern presidency, The Clinton Tapes invites readers into private dialogue with a gifted, tormented, resilient President of the United States. Here is what President Clinton thought and felt but could not say in public.

This book rests upon a secret project, initiated by Clinton, to preserve for future historians an unfiltered record of presidential experience. During his eight years in office, between 1993 and 2001, Clinton answered questions and told stories in the White House, usually late at night. His friend Pulitzer Prize-winning author Taylor Branch recorded seventy-nine of these dialogues to compile a trove of raw information about a presidency as it happened. Clinton drew upon the diary transcripts for his memoir in 2004.

Branch recorded his own detailed recollections immediately after each session, covering not only the subjects discussed but also the look and feel of each evening with the president. The text engages Clinton from many angles. Readers hear candid stories, feel buffeting pressures, and weigh vivid descriptions of the White House settings.

Branch's firsthand narrative is confessional, unsparing, and personal. The author admits straying at times from his primary role — to collect raw material for future historians — because his discussions with Clinton were unpredictable and intense. What should an objective prompter say when the President of the United States seeks advice, argues facts, or lodges complaints against the press? The dynamic relationship that emerges from these interviews is both affectionate and charged, with flashes of anger and humor. President Clinton drives the history, but this story is also about friends.

The Clinton Tapes highlights major events of Clinton's two terms, including wars in Bosnia and Kosovo, the failure of health care reform, peace initiatives on three continents, the anti-deficit crusade, and titanic political struggles from Whitewater to American history's second presidential impeachment trial. Along the way, Clinton delivers colorful portraits of countless political figures and world leaders from Nelson Mandela to Pope John Paul II.

These unprecedented White House dialogues will become a staple of presidential scholarship. Branch's masterly account opens a new window on a controversial era and Bill Clinton's eventual place among our chief executives.

The Barnes & Noble Review

A cross between Woody Allen's Zelig and Tom Hanks's Forrest Gump, MacArthur "Genius Grant" recipient and Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Taylor Branch pops up everywhere in Bill Clinton's presidency. An old friend from the 1970s (he, Bill, and Hill shared an apartment when they all worked on George McGovern's presidential campaign in Texas), Branch is pressed into service as a chronicler of events to aid the president with his eventual memoir writing. Branch helps out at the inaugural, offering phrases and rewriting sentences for The Speech, even though he doesn't even have a seat at the actual event (he's reduced to squatting in the aisle). Then he, Hillary, and Bill all walk into the White House together. When Clinton realizes that Branch knows Aristide, the deposed leader of Haiti, he uses Branch as a go-between to get a pledge that if Aristide is restored to power, he'll not try to extend his term of office (later Branch tags along when U.S. forces do restore the Haitian president). Clinton also sounds Branch out on Cabinet appointments and on policy, and uses him as a go-between during a baseball strike.


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