Buckley

Sam Tanenhaus

Book - 2024

"At age 25 in 1951, with the publication of God and Man at Yale, a scathing attack on his alma mater, William F. Buckley, Jr. instantly seized the public stage-and commanded it for the next half century, leading a new generation of activists and ideologues to the heights of political power while he himself attained unique fame and public influence. Ten years before his death in 2008, Buckley chose prize-winning biographer Sam Tanenhaus to tell the full story of his life and times, granting him extensive interviews, entrée to his intimate circle, and unrestricted access to his most private papers. Thus began a deep investigation into the vast and often hidden universe of Bill Buckley and the conservative revolution. Buckley vividly cap...tures its subject in all his facets and phases-founding editor of National Review, best-selling novelist and memoirist, jet-setting clubman and socialite, downhill skier and sailboat racer, wisecracking candidate for mayor of New York, flamboyant antagonist of James Baldwin and Gore Vidal, mentor and idol to hundreds who today populate the worlds of politics and media. Tanenhaus also reveals the private and at times secret life of Bill Buckley: his backstage collaborations with Senator Joseph McCarthy and Watergate felon Howard Hunt; thorny relationships with Presidents Nixon and Reagan; flirtations with financial ruin and legal censure-and, late in life, Buckley's lonely struggle to hold together a movement coming apart over AIDS, the culture wars, and the invasion of Iraq. Majestic in its sweep, lushly detailed, rich in ideas and argument, packed with news and revelations, Buckley is the definitive account of an American giant and the revolution he led"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Sam Tanenhaus (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780375502347
  • Connecticut Yanquis
  • Devotions and blasphemies
  • Tutorials
  • A righteous cause
  • Invoking the rules
  • Inactive duty
  • Full stride
  • Causes lost and found
  • Chairman Bill
  • "We need a brigade of intellectuals"
  • An almost perfect match
  • Hearts and minds
  • Low company
  • Closing ranks
  • Binges
  • Exiles
  • Radical conservatives
  • Fallen warriors
  • Camden in black and white
  • Vestigial heat
  • Turning the wheels of justice
  • Life support
  • Comings and goings
  • Saving the republic
  • Young Americans
  • New frontiers
  • An amazing man
  • Freedom fighters
  • Gnostics at the garden
  • Slippery slopes
  • Buckley for mayor
  • Fire and ice
  • Under siege
  • La politique, c'est moi
  • War crimes
  • "Is there nothing left of us?"
  • "The sweat of idealism"
  • Flying blind
  • Weak and devious men
  • Seductions
  • The unquiet grove
  • "Bright hour of history"
  • "We have a nation to run"
  • Dissipations
  • Mind of winter.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Comprehensive biography of the conservative stalwart who held great sway over Republican presidents. William F. Buckley, whom formerNew York Times books editor Tanenhaus met in 1990 while working on a biography of Whittaker Chambers, was a man of ironclad conservative principles--up to a point. As a teenager, precocious and brilliant, he was a champion among the prep-school set of the isolationist America First movement. He opposed civil rights, championed white supremacy, and advocated a poll tax and intelligence testing. At Yale, infamously, Buckley badgered faculty members who were insufficiently religious--and even sicced the FBI on one--while decrying "the tendency by some teachers to utilize the classroom as a soapbox from which to impose upon their students not the great ideas of great scholars, but their own." He was a committed McCarthyite ("McCarthy's egghead," one newspaper called him), a supporter of the John Birch Society until he wasn't, and an engineer of much of the anti-federal sentiment that now courses through American politics. In short, although he styled himself a Yankee patrician, he was a neo-Confederate at heart. Yet, with the magazine he founded,National Review, Buckley could also change his mind; as Tanenhaus notes, whereas Buckley had once criticized Israel for "dredging up Holocaust 'luridities' such as 'the counting of corpses and gas ovens,'" he became sympathetic to Israel, even suggesting that it be made an American state. On a timely matter, Tanenhaus observes that Buckley supported the Panama Canal Treaty, believing that "Panama had become a distraction from the true test of American power and resolve…to continue the struggle against global Communism." Given the present Trump administration's apparent resolve to retake the canal, it's illustrative of how far Buckley's conservatism lies from today's Republican Party. Monumental and instructive, albeit likely to find its chief readership among the last of the conservative old guard. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.