Biographies

Google

General

General
Family and Childhood
Women
Special Needs
Audio Books

Historical

Historical
British Historical
Canadian Historical
United States Historical
Civil War
Holocaust
Large Print
Military Leaders
Political Leaders
Presidents
Religious Leaders
Rich and Famous
Royalty
Prime Ministers

Ethnic

General
Black-African American
Australian
Chinese
Hispanic
Irish
Japanese
Jewish
Native American Indian
Native Canadian Indian
Scandinavian

Careers

Autobiographies and Memoirs
Astronauts
Business
Criminals
Doctors and Nurses
Journalists
Lawyers and Judges
Military and Spies
Philosophers
Scientists
Social Scientists and Psychologists
Sociologists
Teachers

Sports

General
Baseball
Basketball
Explorers
Football
Golf
Hockey
Soccer

Videos

General
A and E Biography
Hollywood
Intimate Portrait

HobbyDo


Search Now:

POLITICAL LEADERS BOOKS

Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Sean J. Savage. By University Press of Kentucky. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $21.69. There are some available for $5.57.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Truman and the Democratic Party.



Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

By Hoover Institution Press. Sells new for $18.95. There are some available for $3.35.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Breaking With Communism: The Intellectual Odyssey of Bertram D. Wolfe (Hoover Archival Documentaries).



Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Ron Ramdin. By Haus Publishing. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $4.92. There are some available for $4.66.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Martin Luther King Jr (Life&Times).
  1. Ron Ramdin has accomplished a short, but fairly comprehensive overview of the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. I found this work accessible, accurate, and in sufficient depth to give a sense of the life and ideas of Dr. King. One would only wish that Mr. Ramdin had done a little more, giving more length and substance. The book is very short. For first time readers of Dr. King, this is a good place to start. Three and a half to four stars.


Read more...


Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Darwin Payne. By Southern Methodist University Press. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $11.85. There are some available for $4.10.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Indomitable Sarah: The Life of Judge Sarah T. Hughes.



Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Ellen Carol DuBois. By Yale University Press. The regular list price is $60.00. Sells new for $4.01. There are some available for $0.97.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Harriot Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Woman Suffrage.
  1. This is a must-read for anyone with a serious interest in women's history in general and the woman suffrage movement in particular. Blatch bridged the generations from the founders of the women's rights movement, including her mother Elizabeth Cady Stanton, to the younger radicals such as Alice Paul. Blatch was instrumental in the New York State suffrage campaign that came to fruition in 1917 and that led to the ultimate victory on the national level in 1918-1920. She was a leader in progressive causes both in England (where she lived for many years after her marriage) and later in the U.S.

    Dubois captures well both the public and private sides of Blatch's life. Of particular interest, of course, is Blatch's relationship with her formidable mother. Blatch's public career was both an homage to her mother and an exploration of ways in which Blatch could be her own person. It was her unique triumph to help to realize the goal of political emancipation that Stanton strove for but did not live to see.



Read more...


Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Joseph Shattan. By Heritage Foundation. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $8.85. There are some available for $3.49.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Architects Of Victory: Six Heroes of the Cold War.
  1. how can one say victory after a few million people lost their lives in all the proxy wars, I couldn't understand why this author "praises" these people, communism fell under it's own faulty economic structure. I thought when I first picked up this book, lets see what he has to say, by the time I finished the book I was disgusted! How can ANY side claim victory in a war, everybody loses in a war, everybody.


  2. This book's objectivity is suspect due to the fact that it was published by the conservative Heritage Foundation; however, Joseph Shattan does a good job in making his case for these six men who did so much to alter the course of late 20th century history. It is remarkable that his list includes two American presidents (one Democrat, one Republican), a German chancellor, England's greatest prime minister, a pope, and a Russian writer. Such a disparate group makes this more than an essay on politics, it is a rich analysis of fifty years of world history. You can disagree with Shattan (as other reviewers have done), but you cannot deny that he has offered good reasoning for his heroic choices. It is enlightening to read about the contributions of Solzhenitsyn, Adenaur, and John Paul II, which are not well known. It is extremely satisfying to read a concise analysis of what Truman, Churchill, and Reagan brought to the mix. I believe that conservatives give Reagan too much credit for "winning" the Cold War, however I also believe that history will bear them out to a very large degree. Churchill is a giant, truly the Man of the Century (despite what TIME magazine thinks), and get his credit here. Truman obviously had a strong grasp on "the big picture" even as he grew into his role. It is interesting to apply what Shattan teaches us to the study of governments, economies, and social progress in this same time period. Joseph Shattan has done us all a favor by publishing this book; maybe efforts like this will finally begin to reduce the luster from Mikhail Gorbachev. Buy this book and read it. Then donate it to your kids' school library.


  3. This is the ideological nonsense that passes for intelligence on the rabid right. In regards to Reagan, although a critique of the importance of these "Hero's" is overdue. If just spending the USSR into destruction were true, the Soviet Union would have fallen in 1943 when they spending virtually everything on materiel. Read about the economic situation the Soviets faced and Gorbachev's thoughts. He knew the situation was desperate long before he got to the top, and knew there must be changes. He allowed the borders to open. A few more facts, i.e., Solidarity, Perstroika, and you'll get a picture of what happened. The USSR would have collasped without Reagan. Why would the Soviets just throw in their hand after Reykjavik? (read Frances Fitzgerald's new book.) The first time I heard this inane theory about Reagan I did the same thing Gorbachev did when he first heard it - I broke into a good belly laugh. I will admit the right has a PR machine that is second to none. But in the end this is just another specious attempt to revise history, a close cousin to "FDR was in on Pearl harbor."


  4. This book is a very impressive piece of work. Shattan is very fair when he writes about each and every person, no matter what their political stripe. From Churchill's prescient knowledge of what must be done to Truman's acknowledgement of the danger that Communism posed to Adenauer's firm and unwavering alignment with the West to Solzihentisyn(sp?) showing how the Cold War was really a moral struggle to Pope John Paul II's unwavering determination to free Poland to Ronald Reagan who ultimately caused the end of the Cold War; even though it came under Bush's administration; Shattan demonstrates a keen eye for details and an excellent sense of analysis. This is well worth reading for anyone interested in the Cold War.


  5. Joseph Shattan has assembled a series of short, but informative profiles of six leaders who played central roles in the Cold War. His roster of heroes includes:

    -- President Truman. After initially toeing the accommodationist line of FDR, Truman soon recognized the expansionist ambitions of the Soviet Union and reacted accordingly. His Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Greece and Turkey aid package stopped the spread of Marxist hegemony in its tracks and set the contours for the four-decade struggle that was to come.

    -- Winston Churchill. In and out of office, he warned early and often of the rising Bolshevik threat. But like his earlier forebodings about Hitler, his alarms fell largely on deaf ears. It was not until the 1980s that the West pursued Cold War strategies that can truly be called Churchillian -- with predictable results.

    -- Konrad Adenauer. As the first Chancellor of the Republic of Germany, he planted the vital country squarely in the Western camp. West Germany was the crucible of the Cold War. Lacking a leader of Adenauer's resolve and conviction, that country could have easily fallen under the Soviet orbit, or, as Stalin designed, opted for a feckless, hollow "neutrality."

    -- Solzhenitsyn. In Shattan's words, he "re-moralized the struggle" after Viet Nam and other setbacks cast doubt on the West's Containment policies. His seminal writings, especially "The Gulag Archipealgo," laid bare the repressive underpinnings of the Soviet system, while his public outrage at detente opened many eyes in the West.

    -- Pope John Paul II -- The first non-Italian Pontiff in some 400 years came around at a most propitious moment. (Andropov and other Soviet paranoids contended that the Pope's selection was engineered by the U.S.) Lech Walesa credits Pope John Paul II with "saving Solidarity" -- the counter-revolutionary movement that administered the first schisms in the Soviet armor --and in inspiring his fellow Poles in their stuggle to shake off the yoke of Communist domination.

    -- President Reagan. He foresaw the demise of the Soviet Union at a time when many saw history moving inexorably away from the West. Beginning in the 1970s, he called Communism a failed and failing system that would ultimately be trumped by the West -- heretic words to Western leaders who thought befriending the Soviets was the best way to change their behavior. As President, he pursued policies (Churchill's) expressly designed to exacerbate the tensions within the Soviet system. The Berlin Wall was toppled (it did not "fall"; it was pushed) less than 10 months after he left office.

    Shattan's work is required reading for anyone interested in learning how the Cold War began -- and ended.



Read more...


Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Anna Deavere Smith. By Anchor. The regular list price is $14.00. Sells new for $4.95. There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Talk to Me: Travels in Media and Politics.
  1. Anna Deavere Smith is a well-educated, well-connected, talented, scholarly African American woman, recipient of many honors, minor movie and television roles, her own one-woman television specials and theatrical performances. The problem with this book is that she NEVER lets us forget how wonderful she is. She is SO impressed with herself that it's amazing to me that she ever got around to interviewing her, uh, subjects. (SHE seems to be the real subject.)

    The book is a fairly interesting look at what goes on in Washington political circles, where most of her interviews take place. If you can get past the parties in her honor and all the other self-focused hoo-ha, you might enjoy reading it. Otherwise, find something to read by an African American writer who is a little more scholarly and a little less self-enthralled.



Read more...


Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Margaret Thatcher. By Smithmark Pub. The regular list price is $5.98. Sells new for $68.05. There are some available for $31.25.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about The Downing Street Years.
  1. If you're interested in how a strong-willed conservative would deal with an ingrained socialist government (not to mention society), give this tome a look-see. Very well written, brutally honest, with just enough of Lady Thatcher's dry Brit humor to spice things up. As another reviewer has pointed out, though, if you're American and unfamiliar with certain British lingo, be prepared to scratch your head on occasion. Favorite quote from the book: "It was not long before the conversation turned from trivialities-- for which neither Mr. Gorbachev nor I had any taste-- to a vigorous two-way debate. In a sense, the argument has continued ever since and is taken up whenever we meet; and as it goes to the heart of what politics is really about, I wouldn't have it any other way>"


  2. This book is one of the most interesting political autobiographies I have read (and I've read many of them). I must confess that interest was intensified due to the fact that I worked in the House of Commons during her tenure in office, and indeed worked during the 1987 General Election for two Conservative Members of Parliament (David Amess of Basildon and David Evennett of Erith & Crayford--yes, I know, you've never heard of either of them).

    This is actually the first volume of Margaret Thatcher's books to be published; the prequel is 'The Path to Power' and there is a follow-up, 'The Collected Speeches', but for those interested, 'The Downing Street Years' is the book to have.

    It begins with the 1979 General Election, and carries forward to her resignation as Prime Minister a decade later. In this volume are her perspectives on all the various Cabinet intrigues, shuffles and reshuffles; her attempts to find civil servants and other helpers who were not of the old guard but of a new mentality, often asking, 'Is he one of us?' by which she meant, not is he a Conservative, but rather, will he get something accomplished, is he a do-er?

    Thatcher's perspectives on the various scandals and inter-Cabinet fighting makes for interesting reading -- she is candid in her likes and dislikes among her Cabinet colleagues. Her final row with Geoffrey Howe, who delivered a scathing speech in the HoC that mostly prompted the leadership crisis, is enlightening. (I've not seen his version, if one exists--it would be good to compare the two sides.) She was very disappointed at the end when she thought she had the continued support of the party, but each of her ministers and 'friends' told her in turn that while he supported her, others would not. She saw the writing on the wall, and after having won the first ballot for party leadership but not by a sufficient majority to avoid a second ballot, she resigned in favour of John Major (whose autobiography, recently issued, is also well worth reading, particularly for his comments about how Thatcher tried to maintain a controlling influence over him from behind the office).

    You might be tempted, if you're not really into politics and not reading this for scholarly purposes, to skim over various minor issues that are gone into great detail. Historians are appreciative, but I seriously ask myself how many non-political scientists and historians will read through all the detail of what are now minor bits of history?

    In all, a brilliant career, the first woman head of government in a major Western democracy, and well worth reading on the whole.



  3. Highly interesting and exhaustively detailed first-hand account of the first female UK premier. In the 1980s, Britain could arguably be defined by three things: Diana, Pop music, and Margaret Thatcher-- it is refreshing to see the least showy of the three recall her memoirs. Although the Iron Lady's sometime turbulent relationship with the Queen is hardly ever mentioned. In fact, Her Majesty barely appears at all...in that case, you will have to consult a biography for her infamous debacle with the Queen over the Commonwealth. Still, highly recommended...even if you need to take it's mammoth size in small doses. A great read.


  4. A no nonsense and fast paced (yes and lengthy) review of Britain in the 70's 80's and early 90's. Thatcher led the UK out of the "pit" of socialism (and closed a few pits too!)
    Sadly the world lacks Politicians with conviction when we need them more than ever. This book will restore your faith in the fact that real politicians DO and WILL have an opinion. Love her or hate her she DID change her times...and sat down to write about how she left her mark. The creed of Thatcherism will not die and just look at New Labour, she even convinced the left to move to the right!


  5. I thought that this was an interesting autobiography of a most unusual modern leader. Lady Thatcher gives a detailed account of her 11 years as British Prime Minister. She devotes a generous amount of space to the Falklands War, the Troubles in Northern Ireland, her dealings with a wide variety of foreign leaders, and her tackling of major domestic problems. While I enjoyed the book, I had difficulty with some of the terms that Lady Thatcher uses. This is because I am not familiar with the finer points of British politics.


Read more...


Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Jessica Allen. By Harper Perennial. The regular list price is $12.00. Sells new for $3.45. There are some available for $0.81.
Read more...

Purchase Information
2 comments about The Wit and Wisdom of Jesse 'the Body...the Mind' Ventura.
  1. Although I don't like the fact that Gov. Ventura did not authorize this book. It is great because the person, who created the quotes in the first place is pure philsophical excellence.


  2. Why in the world would anyone want to spend a nickel on this book. My advice, make a charitable contribution and feel good that your money is going to someone who appreciates it.


Read more...


Posted in Political Leaders (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Wayne S. Peterson. By Emergence Pr. The regular list price is $15.00. Sells new for $5.45. There are some available for $0.25.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Extraordinary Times, Extraordinary Beings: Experiences of an American Diplomat with Maitreya and the Masters of Wisdom.
  1. Let any man who understands know that this name "Maitreya" is the sum of 666. This being is none other that the Light Bearer-The Bright Morning Star-THE FALLEN ONE...LUCIFER. Woe unto the inhabitants of the earth, for the beast has come down to you as a Lion, seeking whomever he may devour--Revelations. There is only ONE Christ. He was the ONLY son of God Yehovah. For God so loved the world, that he gave his ONLY BEGOTTEN SON, so that who so ever shall believe in him shall not parish but have everlasting life--John 3:16 "Beware, for many will come saying here is the Christ, or I am the Christ...they will come as wolves in sheep's clothing"--Lucifer will claim to be the Christ!. Do not be deceived...For The one and only Christ-JESUS-said in Matthew "There shall rise false Christs, who shall show great signs and wonders...he shall deceive even the elect." Maitreya who promises us something that he cannot give, has only one agenda...to destroy the human race. Christ will indeed return to earth after 7 years of Maitreya's rule. This time will be known as the Tribulation. This Tribulation's beginning will be marked by Maitreya's 7 year agreement w/ Isreal. This agreement, like all promises made by the Father of Lies, will be broken. There is no "Godhood" for any of us. This same thing was promised to Eve in the Garden... "for you will know the difference between good and evil and be as Gods" The real reward for this trespass against God (as Lucifer knew it would be according to eternal law) was seperation from God and the beginning of suffering. "And take heed to yourselves, lest anytime your heart be overcharged [with the cares of this life ] so that the day will come upon you unawares" Luke 21-34

    The time is soon now, very soon. God Speed in these last days.
    This life is nothing in the scheme of things. God Speed in these last days.


  2. Wayne Peterson describes his extraordinary encounters with Maitreya, the World Teacher. Highly recommended for those whose hearts and minds are open to the new energies and the new time. Maitreya, the World Teacher, is here to guide and assist humanity. Also highly recommended are all the books by Benjamin Creme about the Masters of Wisdom. Read and expand your consciousness.


  3. Wayne Peterson's book is extraordinary. His journey is so inspiring and his interactions with Maitreya and the Ascended Masters truly mezmerizing. Wayne seems to be leading the way with his courage, conviction and compassionate life story. Extraordinary Times, Extraordinary Beings should be set reading for this difficult time in the world. Learning about Maitreya has given me such a sense of hope for the future of humanity. I highly recommend buying this book; it will take you into a world that few have only dared dream.


  4. All that you need to do in order to appreciate the author's story is to have an open mind and start reading. There is a truth here that will tell its own story and you can decide for yourself what it means to you. The book is well written and entertaining, so much so that you just might mistake the Masters of Wisdom for old friends.


  5. Loved this book! Use for a lot of referrals. My husband read it twice. Couldn't put it down.


Read more...


Page 227 of 250
10  20  30  40  50  60  70  80  90  100  110  120  130  140  150  160  170  180  190  200  210  217  218  219  220  221  222  223  224  225  226  227  228  229  230  231  232  233  234  235  236  237  240  250  
Truman and the Democratic Party
Breaking With Communism: The Intellectual Odyssey of Bertram D. Wolfe (Hoover Archival Documentaries)
Martin Luther King Jr (Life&Times)
Indomitable Sarah: The Life of Judge Sarah T. Hughes
Harriot Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Woman Suffrage
Architects Of Victory: Six Heroes of the Cold War
Talk to Me: Travels in Media and Politics
The Downing Street Years
The Wit and Wisdom of Jesse 'the Body...the Mind' Ventura
Extraordinary Times, Extraordinary Beings: Experiences of an American Diplomat with Maitreya and the Masters of Wisdom

Copyright © 2005
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Sun Sep 7 21:59:46 EDT 2008