JOHN A. FARRELL is the author of Clarence Darrow: Attorney for the Damned, which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Biography, and Tip O'Neill and the Democratic Century. A longtime journalist, he worked at The Denver Post and at The Boston Globe, where he served as White House correspondent and on the vaunted Spotlight team.
“Beautifully written and deeply insightful. . . . A bracing
portrait of a man untethered from principle and ideology, driven
throughout his life to win at any cost and thereby palliate his
deep-seated insecurities. . . . Nixon was not an easy man to
understand. And even now, his failures and accomplishments are not
easy to classify. In Farrell’s capable hands, however, we see Nixon
in his entirety—and we can’t help but wonder what he means for our
politics today.”
—William Howell, San Francisco Chronicle
"[Nixon is] an electrifying subject, a muttering Lear, of perennial
interest to anyone with even an average curiosity about politics or
psychology. The real test of a good Nixon biography, given how
many there are, is far simpler: Is it elegantly written? And, even
more important, can it tolerate paradoxes and complexity, the
spikier stuff that distinguishes real-life sinners from comic-book
villains? The answer, in the case of Richard Nixon, is yes, on both
counts.”
—Jennifer Senior, The New York Times
“A stack of good books about Nixon could reach the ceiling, but
Farrell has written the best one-volume, cradle-to-grave biography
that we could expect about such a famously elusive subject. By
employing recently released government documents and oral
histories, he adds layers of understanding to a complex man and his
dastardly decisions. . . . Outstanding.”
—Aram Goudsouzian, Washington Post
"With a mix of morbid fascination and deep empathy, Farrell
humanizes Nixon, but he doesn't let him off the hook . . . The
dichotomy between brooding schemer and extroverted leader has long
defined the Nixon dynamic. But with Richard Nixon, Farrell has
etched those history-shaking contradictions into the most vivid—and
the most startling—relief to date."
—Jason Heller, NPR.org
“An extremely valuable introduction to the life and times of one of
our most consequential presidents. Farrell gives us a Nixon rich in
both character flaws and great accomplishments, the
latter fueled by his transformational vision. It’s a
worthy look at a fascinating president.”
—Ray Locker, USA Today
“Though there have been many previous books about Nixon, Mr.
Farrell’s comprehensive, one-volume biography is welcome. . . . In
lively, vigorous prose, he takes readers through Nixon’s career,
offering incisive judgments and revealing details along the
way.”
—Robert K. Landers, Wall Street Journal
“Superb . . . the most formidable attempt yet made to put Richard
Nixon in perspective.”
—Steve Donoghue, Christian Science Monitor
“Farrell is an exceptional writer. . . . It may not have been
Farrell’s intent to produce a cautionary tale about the dangers of
a presidency run aground on lies, paranoia, prejudices, and
delusion, but that’s what he’s accomplished.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Farrell’s blockbuster portrait of Nixon is revelatory—filled with
fresh reporting shedding new light on the roots of our own dark
political moment. He shows that dirty tricks, October Surprises,
and anti-elitist resentment were among the gifts Nixon bequeathed
to our own presidential politics.”
—Jane Mayer, author of Dark Money: The Hidden History of the
Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right
“John A. Farrell has once again delivered a rich, precisely written
portrait of the past to help us understand the present. He traces
the origins and turning points of one of the most complex,
complicated and fascinating presidents of the modern age with flair
and narrative skill. Each page is a joy to read, on the way to a
very satisfying whole.”
—John Dickerson, moderator of CBS’s Face the Nation and author of
Whistlestop
“Brilliant, ruthless, a president who combined some enlightened
policies with inner darkness, Richard Nixon stands alone in the
history of American politics. John A. Farrell’s gripping account
vividly captures Nixon from his earliest days—catapulting to
Congress with a cold-blooded debate stunt—to the mounting crises he
faced in the White House, culminating in his spectacular fall.”
—T.J. Stiles, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Custer’s Trials and
The First Tycoon
“In Richard Nixon, John A. Farrell is tough and unyielding, yet
gives his subject a fair hearing through each gripping episode.
‘I’m not a quitter,’ Nixon once protested, and this grand,
indispensable book proves him right, right to the end.”
—Chris Matthews, author of Kennedy & Nixon: The Rivalry that Shaped
Post-war America
“Jack Farrell gives us two profoundly resonant Richard Nixons—the
last progressive Republican, and the author of our national
divisions. He also gives us, in one engrossing volume, the defining
biography of our darkest president.”
—Larry Tye, author of Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal
Icon
“With clarity and verve, John A. Farrell’s deft pen illuminates the
life of America’s 37th president. Unsparing yet fair-minded in its
analysis and based on deep research in a wealth of archival and
published sources, Richard Nixon is a fast-moving and
penetrating portrait of this controversial and complicated
man.”
—Fredrik Logevall, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Embers of
War
“John A. Farrell's Richard Nixon: The Life is an expertly written
and strikingly comprehensive portrait of America's most complicated
president. Farrell has a genius for the telling anecdote and
apropos quote. His command of the sources is staggering. Richard
Nixon is a true landmark achievement.”
—Douglas Brinkley, Professor of History at Rice University and
author of Cronkite
“Full of fresh, endlessly revealing insights into Nixon’s political
career, less on the matter of his character, refreshingly, than on
the events that accompanied and resulted from it.”
—Kirkus Reviews, starred review
“A probing biography . . . Readers track the lonely and hard-won
ascent of a sickly, love-starved child, who dreams like a Romantic
but maneuvers like Machiavelli. . . . An unflinching portrait.”
—Booklist, starred review
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