Showing posts with label speech writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label speech writers. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

An Unfinished Love Story

 

An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s by Doris Kearns Goodwin 480 pp.

This book was fascinating to me since, while I remembered the major events of the 1960s, I was a child during that time (the assassination of JFK happened when I was in kindergarten). I have read other books by Doris Kearns Goodwin but was not familiar with her husband, Richard Goodwin, a man who was so instrumental in the world of Democratic politics in the 1960s. When her husband reached his 80s the two of them began go through his stored files of his work and memorabilia of his days in Washington as a  clerk for Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter. Then as counsel for the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce where he investigated the television quiz show scandals of the 1950s. (Goodwin was portrayed by actor Rob Morrow in the 1994 film "Quiz Show.") After that he became one of the speechwriters and advisors for Senator John Kennedy during his campaign for the Presidency. Kennedy appointed him Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs where he tried to discourage Kennedy from ordering the Bay of Pigs operation. Goodwin aided the First Lady in many tasks most notably in the relocating of Egyptian temples that would have been flooded by the Aswan Dam project. He was also instrumental in the planning of the dinner for Nobel Prize winners (Dinner in Camelot) and finally arranging for the eternal flame Jackie Kennedy requested for her husband's grave. Following Kennedy's death Goodwin became Secretary General of the Peace Corp until he accepted a job with President Lyndon Johnson where he was credited with writing some of LBJ's most important and effective speeches before resigning because of differences over the Vietnam War. After some work in academia, Goodwin, ever against the war in Vietnam, joined Eugene McCarthy's campaign for President leaving when his friend Bobby Kennedy decided to run after LBJ announced he would not seek re-election. Upon Kennedy's assassination in Los Angeles, Goodwin went back to the McCarthy campaign. Following those years he taught and wrote, producing articles, books, and a play. He married Doris Kearns, who had worked with LBJ on his memoir, in 1975 and they were married until his death in 2018. I learned so much from this book. I never knew that LBJ pushed the Fair Housing Bill through Congress on the heels of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination or how much friction existed between LBJ and Bobby Kennedy. And I didn't know anything about the man, Richard (Dick) Goodwin. I listened to the audiobook, read by the author.

Monday, October 5, 2015

The Speechwriter

The speechwriter: a brief education in politics / Barton Swaim 204 pgs.

Swaim's book is very fun to read for anyone who is interested in politics and probably anyone who likes to slow down and stare at accidents.  Swaim was a speechwriter for governor Mark Sanford of South Carolina.  Sanford was a complete jerk as a boss but was being looked at as a potential vice presidential candidate.  All of that before he went missing for 5 days while "hiking on the Appalachian trail" which was ACTUALLY a trip to visit his mistress in Argentina.  Staffers, who didn't ever like the governor suffered as they watched him became a joke and wondered if future job interviews would be granted only because the interviewer wanted a laugh.

After reading about the treatment of the staff, I think many of us will appreciate our jobs a little bit more.

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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Cash Out

Cash Out/Greg Bardsley  392 pgs.

I grabbed this book based on the cover blurb that mentioned “nine kinds of twisted and funny as hell” which sounds pretty good to me.  This turned out to be pretty accurate.  Some of the characters in this book will stay with me.  Larry, the “odd” neighbor who proves to have some pretty important kidnap and “extraction” skills when it comes down to it, and Calhoun who presents as the “special” neighbor living in a 300 square foot mother-in-law apartment who later turns out to be a multi-millionaire early employee of Microsoft in addition to being the annoying busy body is also entertaining.  But really, the story revolves around Dan, a speechwriter working at a high tech company who is trying to make it for 3 more days until his stocks vest and then he is cashing out and running for the hills.  Unfortunately, there are some people out there who are making this task difficult.  The bitter ex-IT group who is blackmailing Dan to do something for them that he doesn’t even understand, the shady board members who have a lot of money in the game and Dan himself who has made a few spectacularly bad choices lately that put it all at risk.  Very entertaining book but the author may focus a little too much on poor Dan getting nailed in the family jewels…over and over again. 

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Sunday, July 4, 2010

Speech*less: Tales of a White House Survivor

Speech*less: Tales of a White House Survivor/Matt Latimer

Matt is a life long conservative that tells us about his career in government as a speech writer for various elected officials plus Don Rumsfeld. He made his way up the ladder ultimately writing for President Bush. As someone who isn't a big Bush fan, I wondered how I would reconcile my beliefs with what Matt would undoubtedly say in his book. I should not have worried. Turns out Matt has ideals that he has actually THOUGHT about and reasons for his beliefs. Also, he is a great writer who really dishes on everyone he names...and he names a LOT. Loved the book Matt but I'm sure you realize you won't be working in government again anytime soon. Or really, I guess that is probably small minded of me. Most people there probably don't read books anyway. - Christa