Obama The call of history

Peter Baker, 1967-

Book - 2017

Peter Baker's authoritative history of the Obama presidency is the first complete account that will stand the test of time. Baker takes the measure of Obama's achievements and disappointments in office and brings into focus the real legacy of the man who, as he described himself, "doesn't look like all the presidents on the dollar bills."

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Callaway 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Peter Baker, 1967- (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
319 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 31 cm
ISBN
9780935112900
  • This winter of our hardship
  • Bring our troops home
  • Time to turn the page
  • A shellacking
  • Justice has been done
  • Fought our way back
  • Governing by crisis
  • Red line
  • Haunted by those deaths
  • Could have been me
  • Never fear to negotiate
  • A personal insult
  • Epilogue.
Review by New York Times Review

I cannot look at Peter Baker's extra-large and lavishly illustrated history of the Obama years without thinking of my mother. She supported Hillary Clinton in 2008, but after the convention she put two Barack Obama stickers on the bumper of her red Prius and they were still there the day she died, in December 2012, six weeks after she voted for him again. She was passionate about politics, and intensely partisan, and if cancer had not killed her, Trump's candidacy might well have - long before election night. But if she were here, she would buy a dozen copies of "Obama: The Call of History," lay them out on her coffee table and all over her house, and then not have the heart to crack the cover. It isn't easy. A mere 11 months since Inauguration Day, these photographs evoke not just the previous administration but, seemingly, another age. It does not matter what Obama is doing. He might be editing a speech on health care, sitting stone-faced in the Situation Room as Navy Seals approached Osama bin Laden's compound, working out with a disabled veteran, consoling the mother of a child killed in the Sandy Hook school shooting after Congress blocked gun control legislation, bending over in the Oval Office so that a curious 5-year-old could touch his hair or hugging a victim of Hurricane Sandy. Integrity like his cannot be photoshopped or feigned. In Obama's company on the Jersey Shore, even Chris Christie looks like a mensch. In addition to the many photographs, Baker's book contains a timeline, a review of the Obama years "by the numbers," reproductions of New York Times front pages and a series of short chapter-ending vignettes (some serious: Obama and the Roberts court; someless so: Obama on the basketball court). For folks who enjoy sustained narrative with their pictures and sidebars, there are also 12 chapters of recent history. Baker, The Times's chief White House correspondent through Obama's tenure, is neither fanboy nor debunker. A few sentences from his epilogue are characteristic of his determination to be fair: Obama "enjoyed two years of sweeping legislative victories arguably not seen since the days of Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, then spent six years fighting for inches against an opposition-dominated Congress that he barely bothered to woo and that did not want to work with him in the first place." "He took great strides toward his goals in health care, financial regulation and climate change, only to fall short in immigration, criminal justice and income inequality." "Obama put two women on the Supreme Court and helped break down barriers for gay and lesbian Americans, even as racial minorities remained far behind in education and income." Line by line, issue after issue, Baker balances opportunities and obstacles, promises and results, criticism and praise. Obama himself takes the long view, likening the course of events to "a long-running story." Actually, it is the "one damn thing after another" out of which historians construct long-running stories. Baker's is an early draft. What historians writing decades from now make of Obama will have as much to do with what happens between now and then as it does with what happened during his presidency. The first thing that happened to Obama's political legacy was the election of Donald J. Trump, who promised to undo his signature achievements. Time will tell. Obama's reputation is another matter. Trump has already been good for that. Obama's favorability rating has risen steadily since January. And very likely not since tributes to the assassinated John F. Kennedy will a book of photographs of a president so recently departed make millions of Americans want to cry. These photographs evoke not simply another president but another age. JAMES GOODMAN, a professor of history and creative writing at Rutgers University, Newark, is the author of "Stories of Scottsboro," "Blackout" and "But Where Is the Lamb?"

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 3, 2017]