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General readers might prefer earlier transcription efforts, such as Watergate principal John Dean's 2014 The Nixon Defense, since the excerpts in that book are shorter and more context is given. Even so, these longer excerpts resemble an oddly fascinating reality show, and historians will like that Brinkley and Nichter worked with the most complete body of recordings and used audio equipment of the highest quality to ensure transcription accuracy.
Readers will find this a useful, accessible survey of the topic, enriched by Armacost's firsthand recollections from his diplomatic career, which includes the Japanese ambassadorship.
This book was written for scholars; political scientists specializing in this emerging field will appreciate the rigor of these studies. Other readers, however, would find the book inaccessible. [See "Editors' Spring Picks," LJ 2/15/15.]
Kinder's own antiwar opinions are evident throughout his work, which some readers may feel detracts from its value. All readers will agree, however, that the author's research is valuable, although some might prefer Beth Linker's more focused War's Waste.
The author will engage academic readers with the nuance of his argument. While general readers will not find the grandeur of Robert Caro here, they will appreciate the clarity of Zelizer's writing and the brevity of his account. All readers will take note of his apt references to current Congressional dynamics and will discover in this book a fine complement to Caro's work. [See Prepub Alert, 7/21/14.]
While Lee is occasionally guilty of fairly dense academic jargon, most readers interested in the topic will overlook that problem given the book's well-written first-person accounts of the events she attended and for the nuanced but devastating critique of an industry she portrays as needing one.
Timed to coincide with Veterans Day, the book is filled with inspiring narratives, and while most readers will be unable to support veterans in the manner Schultz now does through his company and foundation, the authors will likely have some success in "bridging the civilian-military divide."
The best part of Miller's book is his final chapter on President Barack Obama, in which he discusses unrealistic expectations. He would have been better served expanding that analysis into a long essay. Much of the rest of the volume is repetitive and not especially novel.