Home :: Books :: Audio CDs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs

Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
When Character Was King: A Story of Ronald Reagan

When Character Was King: A Story of Ronald Reagan

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $19.77
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: To whynot48124's review from Michigan
Review: Before you come online and begin spouting your political agenda [[I see that you've rated two book since Reagan's death...both by Noonan and both quite negative]]]..

WHY DON'T YOU READ THE BOOK FIRST??!! There are plenty of forums online for you to print your views. This, IMHO is not the place. Frankly, I don't come to Amazon to get opinions of this nature. This is Amazon.com...an online bookstore and these are supposed to be reviews of books written...not opinions of past presidents.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Stirring Tribute to a Great Leader
Review: I agree 100% with the other reviewers who have praised this book. Peggy Noonan's book serves as a concise but relatively thorough biography of Reagan, an informative explanation of the influences that guided his decisions before and during his political career, and a spirited and insightful defense of some of Reagan's controversial actions (controversial, at least, to those who Reagan called "our liberal friends" who "know so many things that are not so"). Plenty of funny, enlightening, and touching anecdotes help to make this a great tribute to one of our Nation's greatest leaders.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Could be better
Review: I just really didn't find this book very substantive. The few times that I was enlightened came from direct quotations of Ronald Reagan. Noonan's book is more for people who want an easy beach-read rather than people who intend to be truly educated about the life of Reagan.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Inspiring Book About An Inspiring Man
Review: I really enjoyed this warmly written, personal book by Peggy Noonan. I'm glad I was old enough to remember President Reagan before he went into seclusion. What an extraordinary man, before, during and after his Presidency. I will be looking for more books by Peggy Noonan if they are half as well-written as this one!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Well written nonsense
Review: If you want to read a love letter to Ronald Reagan, one that ignores reality and floats on clouds of dreamy prose, this is your book. Noonan writes well, but eliminates any act of Reagan's that doesn't uphold her thesis, that his character was always stellar. That means there are plenty of omissions!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: O Noble Spirit!
Review: Noonan is one of the most captivating political writers of our time. Her columns are always edifying, witty and filled with insight. This semi-biography on the great Ronald Reagan is the same. She draws on her own and others' personal recollections to paint a vivid picture of the Reagan white house whilst also illuminating the earlier history and the post-presidential life of this noble man.

Noonan deals with his youth, the time in Hollywood and the way he first entered politics. There is a lovely description of the Reagan ranch and a suspenseful account of how he won the presidency. Noonan also deals with the love between Reagan and his wife, and their relationships with the children. The account of Reagan's fortitude after the attempted assassination is a highlight of the book.

The text is interspersed with significant parts of Reagan's most important speeches and interesting quotes by various people. The author also excels when she talks about Reagan's marvellous sense of humour and she has interesting angles on foreign affairs, like the president's dealings with the Soviets and the Iran/Contra affair.

Noonan shows how utterly wrong Reagan's critics were and how his vision triumphed over that of the media and the so-called intellectuals (the eggheads for evil who always get it wrong). The chapter dealing with Reagan's voluminous correspondence is poignant and illuminating as it shows his concern for ordinary people from all walks of life.

The chapter Big Triumph looks at the Strategic Defence Initiative (The Space Shield) in the light of 9/11, whilst the next chapter discusses Reagan's influence on George W Bush. The last chapter, The Old Man Of St Cloud Road, looks at Reagan's twilight years and his legacy.

Throughout the book Noonan demonstrates how Reagan's courage, patience, humour and optimism led to his success and his magnificent achievements at home and in the international arena. Her writing is filled with affection and honesty and she really succeeds in making history come alive.

This excellent book concludes with a bibliography and an index. When Character Was King is a must for those who love Ronald Reagan. I would also like to recommend the book by Dinesh D'Souza, the CD-set Speaking My Mind: Selected Speeches With Personal Reflections, Dear Americans: Letters From The Desk Of Ronald Reagan, and the autobiography An American Life.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Thank God for Reagan.
Review: Not only the length of Ronald Reagan's life but also the length of his political shadow has surpassed all expectations. Along with Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy, poll data suggests that he is ranked by the general public as being one of three greatest presidents in our history. With the USS Ronald Reagan being commissioned the other day, there seems to be no more opportune time to discuss a man who, in this writer's opinion, is the greatest hero of the twentieth century.
Peggy Noonan's When Character was King: A Story of Ronald Reagan adds to the plethora of works now available about the 40th president. Dinesh D'Souza's Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader and Michael Deaver's A Different Drummer: My Thirty Years with Ronald Reagan are two other excellent biographies that were also penned quite recently. Noonan's account is as valuable as the others but all of them have something individually unique to offer the reader.
In the case of Peggy Noonan, although she was a speechwriter in the Reagan Administration, her account is a journalistic tapestry and rarely an "I was there" type of memoir (as opposed to Deaver's). Noonan conducts countless interviews with family members like Nancy Reagan and Patty Reagan along with many other friends and associates. I was taken aback when I read Bob Feller quoted several times concerning the strengths of President Reagan. I had no idea that they knew one another. The author left few sources unturned and her account will undoubtedly be treasured by future biographers.
What makes reading about Reagan so immensely rewarding is that his life was lived above and beyond the parameters of our "what did he know and when did he know it" time of cynicism. Noonan makes clear, even in her detailed description of the Iran-contra affair, that this was a leader who breathed optimism and exhaled confidence. Once one finishes Character, the reader will accurately wonder if they'll ever be another man like this born again.
Noonan's story is exactly what it purports to be. It is a description of character, as opposed to a chronological tale and through this writer's talented hand, a frail and sickly man becomes lively again. I think a better title for the book may be Nuances of Ronald Reagan because that's exactly what her narrative delivers. Unlike D'Souza, Noonan does not believe that Reagan was an ordinary man at all. She holds much of what he did to be magnificent and little that he said or accomplished could be described by the word "average."
Of all the traits that he possesses, humility seems to be the one that is all-pervasive. His biggest aspiration as a young man was to become an actor. This profession embodied all of his dreams. When the day came and he was actually offered an acting job in Hollywood (it came with a salary of 200 dollars a week and a seven year contract), he wired back to his agent in California, "Sign before they change their minds."

There is one story that is better than all of the others. Who among us can remain unmoved when reading about the president with Frances Green? For those of you who are unfamiliar with the interlude let me recapitulate the events. Frances Green was a poor 83-year-old woman from California who was a lifelong member of the Republican Party and a fervent admirer of Ronald Reagan. One day she received in the mail an invitation to a Republican fundraiser event that included a meeting with President Reagan. The event came with a hefty price tag (Noonan's account does not mention this specific) and, Ms. Green, failing to notice that a contribution was expected, hopped on a train to Washington to attend without even attempting to RSVP. Upon her arrival, she was barred from the White House, but a Ford executive overheard her story and arranged for her to get a tour anyway.
Think about buying or borrowing a copy of this book as it will give you more tingles than the ending of the movie "Signs." When Noonan shares her memory of Reagan's 1981 inauguration as President of the United States, and tells the reader that the sun made its way through an ugly and dark day to cast a halo of light upon the president's head, it takes an atheist indeed to question it-given the light, glory and freedom this man gave to the world.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: hilarious!
Review: Paggy Noonan's biography of Ronald Reagan ought to have been called "When A Character Was King," for this wise and witty book shows that there was much more to the "Cowboy Charmer" than previously suspeted.

She tells the story with tremendous empathy and uproarious wit. I had not known of Noonan's battles with the bottle -- and the wise counsel Reagan offered after her abortion must have been tremendously helpful.

Noonan does not skip over the less attractive aspects of the Reagan tenure -- his insistence on calling his son Ronnie "Little Nancy Boy," for example, or his preference for black leather briefs. But all in all this is a stirring reminder of the days when a true eccentric -- and yes, a "character" -- ran the White House.



Rating: 4 stars
Summary: At first disappointing, but it satisfies in the end
Review: Peggy Noonan - who really does write "like an angel" as someone once said - would no doubt argue that to understand Ronald Reagan's character one must know in considerable detail about his origins. The first half or more of her book is a biographical chronicle of Reagan's rise from childhood to presidency. It is only sparsely salted with illuminating stories as it carefully recounts the progression of a life that was, until later, not extraordinary. It leaves us wanting more.

However the book delivers more in its later chapters as Noonan recounts less-known stories from her own and others' experience with Reagan as candidate and president. She knits them together with insight and astute observations to illuminate a fine man. The book in the end adequately depicts Reagan's strong convictions in his principles and sense of ethics, his respect for people of all stripes and his extra gentleness for the powerless and ordinary, his often self-deprecating humour, his love of nature and physical work, his seemingly-boundless optimism and other cornerstones of his character and his success.

Ultimately, the book fails in only one respect: it does not show much of the steely edge which most people experienced in politics would believe that Reagan must have had to make it to the Oval Office. Not showing this part of the man's character makes Ms. Noonan's picture less complete. However it is certainly not the one-sided deification that a few one-star reviews by obvious flaming liberals have claimed, and is well worth the time in reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: So far, my favorite book on Ronald Reagan.
Review: Peggy Noonan is an exceptional writer; I could read her all day long. I have even enjoyed reading her writing when I had no idea what she was talking about! :) (As in the case of some political sections of "Life, Liberty..." that occured before I was in the know.) This is actually the first book I read on Ronald Reagan, and 5 books later, it's still my favorite. As one reviewer said, "Peggy Noonan writes like an angel." Of course, it doesn't hurt that she was writing about such an amazing man! I truly wish that every American--but especially those who are still under 40 and/or those who don't remember him--would read this book. Our country and our children would greatly benefit from studying this American hero, our 40th president.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates