Posted on 08/09/2011 12:48:09 PM PDT by Kaslin
As of the last count by the Associated Press several years ago, there had been over 900 books written about Ronald Reagan. In the last several years, more have been added and given the abiding interest in the Gipper, one can be assured that many more are in the offing.
A handful of these books are excellent.
My friend Douglas Brinkley, who edited the Reagan Diaries---and who also edited a new book based on a previously unknown file in Reagans White House desk of his thoughts and musings-told me several years ago, The realm of Reagan scholarship is just beginning to open up.
Del Quintin Wilbers new and groundbreaking book, Rawhide Down, is firmly in the excellent category of Reagan books.
Wilbers book is testament to Brinkleys observation. It is also lively, well-written and, even after 30 years, makes news. It is an important contribution to the history and understanding of one of our greatest presidents.
Surprisingly, in the 30 years since the assassination attempt on Reagan, no comprehensive book has ever been written before and given the meticulousness and thoroughness and story-telling by Wilber, it will be sometime if ever before someone tries to rival Wilber, the police reporter for the Washington Post.
This is where Wilbers skills as a investigative journalist paid off. Until his book, Americans never really knew how close Reagan came to dying, how two split second decisions by Agent Jerry Parr, save Reagans life twice on that day. The book recounts also a marvelous tick tock of the time from when Reagan collapsed in George Washington Hospital (after insisting on walking in under his own steam) to his time on the operating table, as a doctor gently lifted Reagans heart, looking for the bullet. Even thinking about it now as I write this it gives me the chills. Wilbers narrative is that good, reminding one of James Swansons story-telling in Manhunt, especially in the minutes after the shooting of Abraham Lincoln.
Reluctant as I am to use shopworn clichés (unless they serve my purposes) Rawhide Down is a page turner. Many of us who worked for Reagan and have written about Reagan learned things we did not know. So certainly will the more pedestrian reader.
Wilber is not a professional historian which brings up a pet peeve. There exists in this country an attitude among the tenured historians of the academy that only they can record true history. For years, the attitude had been if a writer did not have at least a Masters Degree, if they were not tenured at a top flight school, they then could not be regarded as true historians.
These are the same people who made Barbara Tuchmans life miserable, even as she won two Pulitzers including for her masterpiece, The Guns of August.
History should be written for everybody and not just for the ivory tower historians to read each others works, and put each others works on their mandated syllabi.
History should be recorded by historians, but also by gumshoe reporters like Wilber with a passion for rooting out every fact or by entrepreneurs, who are willing to take risks, since risk is central to their livelihood. History should be lively, informative and involving for the reader.
Rawhide Down is lively, informative and involving.
After all, as Faulkner said history is not was, history is.
There are historians and historiographers. Tuchman was the later and a brilliant one. Historians catalog facts, historiographers bring the past to life.
Ditto on the pet peeve.
A work of history (or any other type of work, FTM) should be judged on its own merits, not on the credentials of the author.
If the author is wrong, show us where. If he's accurate, accept the work as true history.
God was with us that day. I hope he hasn’t given up on us yet.
As a little kid in the forties and fifties I felt proud about being an American, even if I didn’t know exactly why except that I knew we were the good guys. The only time I’ve felt that good since was during the Reagan years and this time I DID know exactly why and again it was because I knew we were the good guys, being led by one of the best Presidents ever.
I’d like to believe I’ll see another one of that caliber some day but deep down I know it isn’t likely. I count my blessings that I was fortunate enough to have lived in the time of Ronald Reagan, the real “Mr. President”.
Rawhide Down by Del Quentin Wilber is a page-turner. I sat down to read it this afternoon and was on page 161 before I realized I had to get up and get something to eat. Fascinating read and highly recommended. I'll probably have it finished by the time I go to bed tonight.
One thing that makes me angry is how John Hinckley was acquitted (for reasons of insanity) of this heinous crime. Not only was one of our greatest presidents nearly killed before he even reached his first 100 days in office, but three others were also almost killed and seriously wounded. All because this slack-jawed piece of scum was obsessed over a movie actress.
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