Selected Product: | What It Takes: The Way to the White House Paperback Author: Richard Ben Cramer Publisher: Vintage Release Date: 1993-06-01 ISBN-10: 0679746498 ISBN-13: 9780679746492 List Price: $25.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance ISBN-10: 1400082773 ISBN-13: 9781400082773 List Price:$14.95 Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--and How It Can Renew America ISBN-10: 0374166854 ISBN-13: 9780374166854 List Price:$27.95 The War Within: A Secret White House History 2006-2008 ISBN-10: 1416558977 ISBN-13: 9781416558972 List Price:$32.00 Promises to Keep: On Life and Politics ISBN-10: 0812976215 ISBN-13: 9780812976212 List Price:$15.00 The Way to Win: Taking the White House in 2008 ISBN-10: 1400064473 ISBN-13: 9781400064472 List Price:$26.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for What It Takes: The Way to the White House by Richard Ben Cramer (ISBN-10: 0679746498, ISBN-13: 9780679746492). At this time we have not yet written a review for What It Takes: The Way to the White House by Richard Ben Cramer (ISBN-10: 0679746498, ISBN-13: 9780679746492). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com An American Iliad in the guise of contemporary political reportage, What It Takes penetrates the mystery at the heart of all presidential campaigns: How do presumably ordinary people acquire that mixture of ambition, stamina, and pure shamelessness that makes a true candidate? As he recounts the frenzied course of the 1988 presidential race -- and scours the psyches of contenders from George Bush and Robert Dole to Michael Dukakis and Gary Hart -- Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Richard Ben Cramer comes up with the answers, in a book that is vast, exhaustively researched, exhilarating, and sometimes appalling in its revelations. You'll be sorry it's only 1000 pages long | Customer Rating: | It's that good. The 1988 US presidential campaign was filled with quirky personalities--the wonky Dukakis, the foot-in-mouth George H.W. Bush, crusty Bob Dole, and of course Gary "Loose Cannon" Hart. Richard Ben Cramer gives us the men behind the names, the desperation behind the campaigns, and does it in a slightly gonzo, riproaring, eminently readable style.
Cramer achieved what I would have thought impossible... he actually made me root for Dole, sympathize with GHWB, and understand (well, sorta) how Gary Hart could have imploded his own campaign. Most of only get to see the public face--Cramer has taken us farther, to see the pressure and the craziness of the race and the origins and formative influences that made each of the candidates what they were. It is as important, and as entertaining, now as it was when it was written. Current campaign watchers, take note: Joe Biden's story is one of the ones told, and it will give you a great deal of insight into his character.
What It Takes is one of those books you buy multiple copies of (because when you lend it to your friends, you're probably not going to get it back). Must read! | Best Politcal Book Ever! | Customer Rating: | | Cramer's research and insights are impeccable. Frequent flashbacks are a bit disconcerting in what amounts essentially to a joint biography of six significant late 20th century political figures and the business of politics. Cramer's literary device of writing through the imagined thoughts of the principals is compelling. I know Mike Dukakis and Cramer has him absolutely cold. The Bush and Dole portrayals also comport with what I have learned about them elsewhere. Ii't fair to assume then that Cramer also "gets" Hart and Gephardt and, still significantly, Joe Biden. I am a political history buff. This is the best book I have read on the subject EVER, supplanting (in my eyes) "The Making of the President - 1960." | Best Election Campaign Book Ever! | Customer Rating: | | I read this book in hardcover when it was published. I can't imagine a better book on the rigors, the deceptions, a true inside story of how campaigns really work. So insightful! The section on Joe Biden is certainly worth re-reading. He is an amazing man. His history is so helpful in looking at this election and comparing him to McCain's Barbie doll saviour, if any comparison is needed after her lame performance reciting practiced answers even though the answers were not to the questions asked. Duck and dodge, but the Katie Couric interviews showed she is lost in the ring and doesn't belong there. Shame on John McCain for subjecting us to the possibility of a Palin presidency. | Now is the Time | Customer Rating: | | If you haven't read this book now is the time! Whenever I am forced to chose only one book as my all time favorite What It Takes (The Way to the White House) by Richard Ben Cramer is the one...I read it when it was first published and still have yet to find another book about politics that is so enthralling..Lots of Joe Biden in the book so that alone makes it a timely book to read now... | An epic book...absolutely timeless | Customer Rating: | This is a book people might shy away from since it deals with the 1988 campaign, and those candidates are basically ancient history (except for Biden). However, what the book really describes it literally 'what it takes' for any man or woman to believe they can be President.
We look at the people running today, and we see them as TV characters and sometimes buffoons, but forget that in their youth they were probably the smartest, most popular, most driven people we would have known. Just to get to a place where one can entertain the idea of running for President takes a life of very, very few wasted opportunities.
So, while this book doesn't talk about Obama or Clinton or Huckabee, etc., you can read it and at least get sort of a sense of what the candidates are like behind the masks they put on.
The best thing that can be said about "What It Takes" is that you will read it and you will appreciate that Presidential candidates actually are qualified, and while they might make terrible decisions, they really are the best we have.
"What It Takes" is an antidote for cynicism. |
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