Taking Charge: The Johnson White House Tapes 1963-64

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Intimate insights into LBJ's tumultuous presidency.

"Taking Charge" serves as a historical goldmine for anyone intrigued by the intricacies of presidential decision-making during one of America's most turbulent times. Lyndon B. Johnson's secretly recorded conversations illuminate his presidency with a candor rarely found in public archives. Feel history come alive as you get the unfiltered perspective of a leader grappling with momentous events. This book might change the way you understand the American 1960s.

Taking Charge: The Johnson White House Tapes 1963-64

Regular price ₱440.55
Unit price
per
ISBN: 9780684847924
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Date of Publication: 1998-09-18
Format: Paperback
Goodreads rating: 4.09
(rated by 292 readers)

Description

The Barnes & Noble ReviewOctober 1997As seen on "Nightline" and "Larry King Live," and excerpted extensively in Newsweek, the presidential tapes of Lyndon B. Johnson have been unsealed. They are examined in Michael R. Beschloss's Taking Charge: The Johnson White House Tapes, 1963-1964.The only president to record his private conversations from his first day in office, LBJ ordered the tapes to be locked in a vault until at least the year 2023. But that request has been preempted and the tapes unsealed, providing a close-up look at a president taking power in a way we have never seen before, beginning with John F. Kennedy's murder in November 1963 and continuing through Johnson's campaign for a landslide victory. In Taking Charge, Beschloss, whom Newsweek has called "America's leading presidential historian," has transcribed and annotated the secretly recorded tapes, providing historical commentary that allows us to understand fully the people, crises, and controversies that appear on them. Significant events and revelations chronicled in Taking Charge include the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination, including Johnson's conversations with FBI director J. Edgar Hoover about the killing. Although he publicly endorsed the Warren Commission's lone-gunman findings, LBJ privately suspected that President Kennedy was killed by a conspiracy, probably backed by Fidel Castro. As early as the spring of 1964, while he prepared for possible military action in Southeast Asia, LBJ privately expressed doubts that the United States could ever win a land war in Vietnam. Johnson feared, after signing the Civil Rights Act, that blacks, inspired by Communists and the man he called "Muslim X" (Malcolm X), might riot and bring about a national white backlash against civil rights. The Johnson White House tapes provide us with an intimate look at Johnson's complex, changing relationships with Lady Bird and the rest of his family, Jacqueline Kennedy, ex-Presidents Truman and Eisenhower, and members of the White House staff. Taking Charge is not only a unique exploration of a momentous presidency but also a highly personal look at the private man who took office after an American tragedy and led the nation into some of its most tumultuous years.
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Intimate insights into LBJ's tumultuous presidency.

"Taking Charge" serves as a historical goldmine for anyone intrigued by the intricacies of presidential decision-making during one of America's most turbulent times. Lyndon B. Johnson's secretly recorded conversations illuminate his presidency with a candor rarely found in public archives. Feel history come alive as you get the unfiltered perspective of a leader grappling with momentous events. This book might change the way you understand the American 1960s.