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Affection and Trust

The Personal Correspondence of Harry S. Truman and Dean Acheson, 1953-1971

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In this riveting collection, published for the first time, we follow Harry S. Truman and Dean Acheson, two giants of the post–World War II period, as they move from an official relationship to one of candor, humor, and personal expression. Together they were primarily responsible for the Marshall Plan and NATO, among other world-shaping initiatives. And in these letters, spanning the years from when both were newly out of office until Acheson’s death at the age of seventy-eight, we find them sharing the often surprising and always illuminating opinions, ideas, and feelings that the strictures of their offices had previously kept them from revealing.
Adapting easily to their private lives, they nonetheless felt a powerful need to keep in touch as they viewed with dismay what they considered to be the Eisenhower administration’s fumbling of foreign affairs, the impact of Joseph McCarthy, John Foster Dulles’s foreign policy, and the threat of massive nuclear retaliation. Adlai Stevenson’s poor campaign of 1956, Eisenhower’s second-term mishaps, family events, speaking engagements, and Truman’s difficulties writing his memoirs are all fodder for their conversations. In 1960 their skeptical stance toward John F. Kennedy (and his father's influence) turned them toward Lyndon Johnson. After Kennedy won they discussed Acheson’s reluctant involvement in the Cuban missile crisis, his missions to de Gaulle and Prime Minister Macmillan, and the Allied position in Berlin.
Unbuttoned, careless of language, unburdened by political ambition or vanity, Truman and Acheson show their own characters and loyalty to each other on every page. Truman, a Missouri farmer with the unpolished but sharp intellect of the largely self-educated man, clearly understands that in Acheson he has a friend with a rare gift for providing unhesitant and truthful counsel. Acheson, well-educated, urbane, and well-off, understands which traits in Truman’s complex character to love and admire and when to admonish, instruct, and tease him. Both men share a deep and abiding patriotism, a quality that truly stands out in today’s world.
A remarkable book that brings to light the very human side of two of the most important statesmen of the twentieth century.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 4, 2010
      A deep affection existed between President Truman, a self-educated Midwesterner and the only 20th-century president who didn't attend college , and his secretary of state, Dean Acheson, a wealthy Ivy league sophisticate. Researching his biography of Truman at the Truman Library, McCullough came across the extensive correspondence that began as both left office. More than 80% of the letters cover Eisenhower's administration. No more prescient than other statesmen, neither Truman nor Acheson doubted the overwhelming threat of communism. Both considered Ike deplorably weak (subsequent historians disagree) and his secretary of state, John Foster Dulles, unnecessarily pugnacious (subsequent historians agree). Both men also sound surprisingly contemporary as they worry about right-wing extremists taking over the Republican Party. Like all letters, these contain gossip about friends and spouses, vacation itineraries, and news of birthdays, holidays, awards, and medical problems. Many readers may skim these parts, but overall they will receive an insightful, if sometimes partial, view of cold war world politics through the eyes of two thoroughly admirable American leaders. 12 illus.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2010
      A revelatory collection of letters, these missives exchanged between a former president and his secretary of state defy simple characterization. They contain political gossip and plans for speeches and for Trumans library and memoirs. Interpersonally, they are infused with mutual esteem expressed in thanks for visits, book recommendations, and commiseration over advancing ages accumulation of ailments and deceased friends. How did two men so opposite as Truman, the Missouri farmer, and Acheson, an epitome of the East Coast establishment, get along so well? Truman biographer David McCullough explores the question in his insightful introduction, suggesting a consonance of the mens political principles as the basis of their friendship, which deepened, or so it seems from these letters, through their low opinion of Trumans successors, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson. But perhaps the explanation resides in the way they valued candor. After Acheson brutally critiqued the manuscript of Trumans memoir, its author replied: Theres nothing worse for a mans character than friends who tell him always how good he is. Valuable to historians, the divulgences in these letters will equally intrigue history readers.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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