A matter of character
inside the White House of George W. Bush
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Word Count
76,500 words, Guess
Page Count
306 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL3305570M
- ISBN-101595230009
- OCLC Control Number55587227
- Internet Archivematterofcharacte00kess
- Library of Congress Control Number2004049152
and 2 more
- Goodreads666763
- LibraryThing161982
Classifications
- DDC973.931/092
- LCCE903.3 .K47 2004
Description
"After digging deeply into the inner sanctum of the White House and George W. Bush's personal life, Ronald Kessler discovered that most of what people think they know about Bush simply isn't true. For instance, that he's not very smart. That he can't focus on complex issues. That he has repeatedly and intentionally lied to the public. That he's narrow-minded about his Christian faith and his conservative beliefs. That he lets other people make the big decisions for him. All myths - driven mainly by biased reporting in the media." "Kessler has been granted extraordinary access to the administration and its key players, including Colin Powell, Donald Rumsfeld, Andrew Card, Karl Rove, Condoleezza Rice, and many others. He discovers how Bush acts when the television cameras leave: honest to a fault, open to new ideas, grounded with common people, and powerful without pretense. He reveals how American's first M.B.A. president negotiates challenges such as terrorism, the economy, and education reform." "In addition to senior officials, Kessler also interviewed dozens of Secret Service agents, former presidential aides, and career White House employees - on deep background - who know the George W. Bush that the public never sees, and know how he really compares with his predecessors. And some of Bush's closest friends reveal how down-to-earth he has remained since his middle-class boyhood in West Texas."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Topics
Places
People
Genres
- Biography.
- Case studies.
Other Editions
- A matter of character: inside the White House of George W. Bush
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