I found this really insightful the first time I read it, so talked my book club into reading it this month. Gerald Ford lived in my neighborhood when he was a congressman so I find Watergate doubly fascinating.
I found this really insightful the first time I read it, so talked my book club into reading it this month. Gerald Ford lived in my neighborhood when he was a congressman so I find Watergate doubly fascinating.
I bailed on this one. It‘s not bad, I just don‘t think I‘m in the mood for such a long and deep book. This is not a reflection of the author but a reflection of my current reading mood. I will return to it when I‘m feeling a good nonfiction because the research and writing are good.
#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl
“Tears welled up in Mark Felt's eyes as he worked his way through the crowd alongside his wife, Audrey.“
#ThingsinCommon
@Clwojick, @Andrew65
√Both have black on the cover.
√And that's about it. 🤣
I‘m so glad I finally made time for this #chunkster
Graft‘s deep dive into the history of Watergate had me riveted. I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
My nonfiction goal for the year is 12, fell a little short this year. Mainly because I did the 800+ page Watergate book as a slow and steady for 5 months! #yearinreview #nonfiction #goals
Reading about Watergate now seems almost quaint. Sure, Nixon obstructed justice, destroyed evidence, committed perjury and attempted to cover up a burglary while he was president. But do you know what he never did?
Nixon never incited a mob to attack the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overthrow an election and illegally seize power. 🤷🏻♀️
August 9, 1973: “…in the end, the first resignation of an American president, driven from office by scandal, crime and corruption, has occurred with the same pomp and circumstance as any other presidential transition. … “Our transition was orderly and by the book.‘”
A stark comparison to the events of Jan. 6, 2021. ☹️
Wow. You can replace “Nixon” with “Trump” and literally every other word on this page is still relevant today. That‘s horrifying and sad.
Watergate hearings open in Congress, May 17, 1973: an investigation into the criminal wrongdoings of a president who was fueled by deceit and paranoia and the conviction that an election (1960) had been stolen from him. Revealed is a tortuous sequence of criminal acts, firings, bombshell journalistic revelations, whimpering Republican cowardice and simpering GOP loyalty.
The more things change with the GOP, the more they stay the same.
Vermonter Garrett Graff who wrote the impressive ‘The Only Plane in the Sky‘ about 9/11 has written another one that I‘m excited to check out. Thought I‘d share a local newspaper‘s review of the book: https://www.sevendaysvt.com/vermont/book-review-watergate-a-new-history-garrett-...
(Captain Adorable and his sister hoping to catch a ride in that boat.)
#BookReport. The tagged book will take me awhile. Really enjoying The Swimmers so far. Loved the Delia Ephron memoir and the Heller (#BookSpin completed). Great start to the month.
A shocking time in our history an in-depth look I can‘t wait to read.