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Madam Secretary: A Memoir

Madam Secretary: A Memoir

List Price: $31.98
Your Price: $21.11
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Fomidable Yet Funny Giant Tells Her Story
Review: Madam Secretary is a wonderful autobiography of former Secretary of State, Madeline Albright.

I found the book to be well written, informative and human. Albright has always impressed me as a straight shooter. The book puts her life on the table for inspection and she doesn't disappoint.

Albright opens her life to the reader in discussing so many personal areas of her life: from her marriage to journalist Joseph Albright; to her surprise at its ending twenty-three years later. She is candid about losing a baby at birth, and of her identity as Mom to three girls. She discusses the struggles of balancing marriage, motherhood, advanced graduate education and a career.

Madeline Albright's candor, humanness and sense of humor are most refreshing and I came away with the sense that she is a rather delightful down to earth lady who would be comfortable and honest in a conversation with most anyone she might meet. While she has pursued great heights across her lifetime, this lady seems to have her feet fairly well planted on earth. A wonderful signpost for me throughout the book of Albright's depth were the incidents where she is able to laugh at herself and make light of her goofs and missteps along the way.

Albright is an intelligent academic and diplomat who has served as a role model for women, as hope for foreign nationals and as a formidable protectress of our nation's interests.

As a naturalized citizen who grew up during Nazi occupation of her homeland, Albright shows her appreciation of our nation through the very human eyes and heart of someone who knows what life is like in the absence of freedom. Albright's subsequent devotion to foundational principles of freedom and democracy of the United States reflect her genuine appreciation for her citizenship and a mindfulness of her own family history.

Beyond the personal aspects of her life, this is the story of an extremely brilliant American woman who dealt with a wide range of world leaders -- from the most admirable to the horribly reprehensible -- as one of the most visible official representatives of the United States during the Clinton administration.

Clearly, the manner in which she conducted herself as Ambassador to the United Nations and later as Secretary of State points Albright out as a great American who has been consistent and courageous in her service to our country's foreign policy.

A great lady candidly tells her story in an honest and classy way.

Excellent read!

Daniel J. Maloney

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best autobiography I've read!
Review: I didn't want it to end. What a wonderful, delightful, insightful book Madeleine has written. To read this book is to walk in her shoes, and to know what it is like to not only care deeply and passionately about foreign affairs and far away countries, but what a single individual along with a motivated team (she could never forget her team) can accomplish in a poultry 4 years, to change the course of history and the lives of women, men and children we may never met. Thanks Madam Secretary! A reader From The Front Range of Colorado and the High Desert of Phoenix.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: pls no more shadings
Review: this book is an injustice to the reader,because it is simply not telling the truth. for example the author states that the clinton adminstation was heavily montoring al queda and was doing everything it could to stop Bin Laden. then the author should tell us that pres. clinton met only twice with his original cia director. we now have more information coming out. i am afraid this book like others in the adminstration will be shown to spend so little time in foreign affairs. i do believe that the author is an outstanding person of character but please stop covering up for a president interested in domestic affairs. he will be remembered for not stopping bin laden when he could have.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 4 cheers for a truly great Secretary of State
Review: As a keen Christian supporter of morals based foreign policy I was thrilled when Albright began the Kosovo war and liberated the oppressed peoples of that region from being massacred by Milosevic and his crew. This book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the past, but who want a wonderful story of how someone overcame adversity in her own life and went on to help thousands of others from massacre and oppression. Christopher Catherwood, author of CHRISTIANS, MUSLIMS AND ISLAMIC RAGE (Zondervan, 2003)

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Lied for Clinton
Review: Gee, I wonder what happened to my previous review? Not surprising that it was censored given the lies spewed by the author in this book. And not a mention of her foolish defense of the lying liar named Clinton. Remember, this is the woman that likes to call people "bipolar", making light of a serious disorder. In any case, the book glosses over the serious errors made by possibly the worst secretary ever because of her kowtowing to foreign despots.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good catchup on foreign issues
Review: I keep generally informed about foreign issues. Rading this book was an interesting and painless way to keep track of all the specifics of what went on in foreign affairs in the past 15 years or so and put what's going on now in better perspective.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If Women Ran the World
Review: Madeleine Albright comes across in this book as an enormously genuine, honest and affable person - qualities one does not expect in the upper echelons of government, or in business for that matter. Her advice was always level headed and was delivered with only her nation's and the world's peoples interest at heart.

I had the good fortune to sit next to Ms. Albright on an airplane trip back from Korea and I can tell you from that brief encounter that she is the genuine article. We sadly miss her involvement in government given the state of world affairs today.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Just a great lovely account
Review: This is almost as good as Mrs. clintons book 'witness to Bills cheating or whatever it was called. This book details how our greatest secretary of state since Colin Powell betrayed the serbs and helped to murder more then 5000 innocent civilians.

Inside this book you will find the following exciting accounts:
1) How Albright was offended by her critics calling her 'halfbright'.
2) How albright was the 'daughter of munich' and the sympahty sourounding this helped her get ahead.
3)How Albright was helpful in giving Serbia no options so that she could flex American muscle and bomb civilians.
4) How albright decided that Osama wasnt a big enough threat to put american resources into finding and gave up on capturing him in the Sudan.
5) How Albright helped the Koreans secure lasting peace in Korea so the North could continue a nuclear weapons program.

These are among the other great revelations in this excellent book on how American foreign policy should allways be conducted so that we will one day be ruled by a Chinamen who is devoted to Islam.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The candid memoirs of the first woman Secretary of State
Review: "Madam Secretary" presents the memoirs of Madeleine Albright, the highest ranking woman in the history of U.S. government (despite what conclusions you might have reached about some of the First Ladies, Edith Galt Wilson in particular). During the eight years of the Clinton administration Albright served as U.N. ambassador and then, following the resignation of Warren Christopher, as Secretary of State. Half of "Madam Secretary" is devoted to that period of her life, while the rest tells the story of how a refugee from Czechoslovakia eventually became the first woman Secretary of State in American history and one of the most admired public figures of recent years (she was confirmed 99-0 by the Senate). The result is a book that is both candid and insightful. The memoirs of any Secretary of State are going to be of importance, but "Madam Secretary" is actually a good read.

Madeleine Korbel Albright was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1937. Her father was an official in the Czech government-in-exile who fled to London, where she remembers enduring the blitz. Her father served in several diplomatic posts after World War II and when the Communists took over Czechoslovakia in 1948 he sent his family to the United States, where he ended up running the School of International Studies at the University of Denver (where one of his prize students was Condolezza Rice). On the personal side of the ledger Albright talks about her marriage to "Newsday" scion Joe Albright, which ended in divorce, raising her three daughters, and learning late in her life that her Jewish grandparents had died in Nazi concentration camps. Earning her doctorate from Columbia, Albright worked her way from being Edmund Muskie's senior legislative assistant to work for National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brezinski in the Carter Administration. When the Democrats returned to the White House in 1992, Albright moved into the upper stratosphere of American diplomacy where she proved herself to be a Wilsonian moralist whose hero was Dean Acheson.

In the most important parts of her memoir Albright provides commentary on all of the foreign policy crises with which she was involved, from Rwanda and Serbia to North Korea and Iraq, with NATO's humanitarian intervention in Kosovo being the episode that stands out most in my mind as the one she wants to present as being paradigmatic of what the Clinton administration was trying to accomplish in terms of foreign policy. Not coincidentally, it was also the specific policy on which she was the biggest advocate and primary architect. She does not make the explicit argument, but when you read of how her family came to the United States the policy seems a logical extension of her personal story. Clearly the goal was to avert a humanitarian catastrophe and not as sign of support for the Albanian guerrillas.

You will also find Albright's views on the national and world figures with whom she had to deal, including Bill and Hillary Clinton, Colin Powell, Vaclav Havel, Vladmimir Putin, Ariel Sharon, Benjamin Netanyahu, Yasser Arafat, Slobodan Milosevic, and even Kim Jong-Il. Of course, a recurring theme of Albright's book is how she had to prove herself in the male-dominated world of power politics, which lends a certain power to the scene where she describes waiting for the phone call from President Clinton where he told her he wanted her to be his Secretary of State. Albright consistently places the emphasis on presenting her side of the record rather than going out of her way to defend particular policies and actions. Her position on American foreign policy is clearly implicit in her accounts, but she does not go out of her way to be an advocate.

Obviously this volume will be a primary document for assessing the foreign policy of the Clinton administration. Albright comes across as being candid and self-efacing, while also provided insights into the goals of the Clinton foreign policy. Having long ago grown tired of the public statements of any and all government officials, it was refreshing to read what it was like to play this came from someone who was actively involved and has never been burdened by being an elected official. Ome of the biggest compliments I could pay to Albright would be that this memoir comes across as being written by a real person. She might have been a diplomat, but she was not a politician (an assessment that I think applies to her successor at the State Department as well). Of course she touches on issues, such as terrorism and relations with Iraq, that are of even more importance today. "Madame Secretary" includes a pair of 16-page color and black & white photo inserts and a chronology of Albright's personal and political life. This 562-page volume will be of interest to not only Albright's personal admirers, but anyone interested in the machinations of American foreign policy in the past decade (especially if they have read Michael Dobbs' "Madeline Albright: A 20th Century Odyssey," the obvious companion volume for a presumably more objective look at the same subject).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An inside view...
Review: Madeleine Albright led a remarkable life - fleeing as a child across war-torn Europe, first from the invading Germans and then from the invading Soviets, the little girl from Prague came to America before a teenager, and ended up becoming the first female Secretary of State in American history (although, interestingly, not even the first non-American-born Secretary of State in the last half century!). She reinvented herself as an American, someone who fell deeply in love with her adopted country, even to the extent that her name Madeleine, isn't the one with which she was christened (although it is the French version of her name, and thus we are reading the memoirs of Madeleine, not Marie Jana Korbel).

She weaves together her personal life and insights together with the professional experiences she has had throughout her various careers, culminating with the office of Secretary of State for several years in Bill Clinton's administration. Her father, part of the Czech government-in-exile, immigrated to America and became a professor (interestingly, one of his student was Condalezza Rice, one of the principle voices in foreign affairs in the current Bush administration). Albright thus had training from the very beginning in terms of both academic and practical aspects of governments and diplomacy.

Albright's academic credentials are impressive, and her experiences in school shaped her later career. For undergraduate work, she studied at Wellesley College in Political Science, and then went to the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University. She finished her formal education at Columbia, receiving a Certificate from the Russian Institute, and her Masters and Doctorate from the Department of Public Law and Government. This is also where she got involved with political and media affairs in earnest.

She was a White House staffer, including staffing the National Security Council, during Carter's presidency; during the 12-year Republican administrations in Washington, her career focused on the Center for National Policy, a non-profit liberal think-tank/research organization formed in 1981 looking at issues in domestic and foreign policy. This gave her continued presence in the field so that when the time came, Clinton tapped her to be the ambassador to the United Nations, and then later Secretary of State.

She met and married Joseph Albright, part of a wealthy media family, and recounts in some detail and emotion the difficulties with the breakup of that relationship. She also confesses an affair with a Georgetown professor, and other difficult times in her life. However, these take a back seat most of the time to her professional career.

Albright makes the claim to have not discovered her Jewish ancestry until late in life; there is reason to discount this belief, given that she is the kind of person likely to know the details of her background, and given that she visited family back in Czechoslovakia back in the 1960s. Reasons for not wanting to be identified as being of Jewish descent during her career are unclear, but in an otherwise very straightforward autobiographical account, this one point seems less than convincing.

Albright does reflect with candor on many world leaders, including her boss Bill Clinton, and his wife Hillary; few of the key names of the 90s are missed here. Ultimately, one comes across with the impression of a erudite diplomat, a skillful politicians, and a sincere worker for the best interests of the nation.


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