Home :: Books :: Biographies & Memoirs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs

Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
George and Laura : Portrait of an American Marriage

George and Laura : Portrait of an American Marriage

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 4 5 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Definitely worth while
Review: Have just finished reading Christopher Andersen's book GEORGE AND LAURA. I recommend it highly. Respectfully and sensitively written. While there are one or two brief passages that make us think, "Andersen is probably not a co-partisan of the President!" -- still -- he respects the president.

Above respectful and sensitive, I would add -- quite poignant at certain points. Both figures have had to deal with tragedies, and before adulthood. Not a definitive biography -- the subtitle is "Portrait of an American Marriage" -- but it does give us a clear enough picture of both the President's and the First Lady's youth and upbringing and things they did for fun. The First Lady, for instance, likes Van Morrison and white-water rafting. The President has switched from strong drink to diet coke (and more power to him!) and likes hard-boiled egg sandwiches.

The book begins and ends with a look at how the Bushes were compelled to deal with terrorism and its aftermath on September 11, 2001.

Worth reading!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read!
Review: I did not want to like them...in fact I am ambivalent about their politics, but this book made them seem real and remarkably likeable.All the trials in their lives brought them to this place in time and they have become superb role models. Once again, Andersen has written a book that is so engrossing you can't put it down!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another interesting profile
Review: I found this to be yet another poignant and prolific work from Christopher Andersen. He is truly one of the great biographers of our time. Although I am not a fan of George W. Bush, this book was a perfect blend of solid investigative journalism and touching human complexities. I saw both the president and his wife in a new light. Once again Mr. Andersen has earned the praises of this reader!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A light, but very enjoyable read...
Review: I had positive expectations when I picked up this biography, and they were more than met. George and Laura is a page turner, light and interesting reading, with plenty to make you chuckle or stir your heart.

Yes, George Bush was born into wealth and privilege, but he really seems to have spent most of his life trying to be just a regular joe, albeit with a very substantial safety net. But his core character trait has always remained very consistent...fierce loyalty to his family and friends.

Laura also had a privileged childhood, but like George, her parents successfully instilled in her the values of middle America. Its heartening to know that the closest friends of both George and Laura are the ones who've known them for 30 or 40 years...not the here today, gone tomorrow relationships of convenience.

The book clearly reveals the source of the strength of this powerful union...a strong foundation in faith, family, and values.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Insightful
Review: I loved this book. It was like a "Biography" episode including details on families, childhoods. I see one person wrote "come on George you can do better than this" uh...hello..
he didn't write the book! another saying "pure fiction". Not sure how listing moving here and moving there and various jobs and turmoil is fiction, but there's a hate filled liberal for you. I thought this was a nice sweet book about real people and it's nice to be reminded they still exist, politics aside.

It made me want to read more about Bush Sr. and Barbara, which is how I wondered into this area..I thought I may as well post.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent read!
Review: I read this book in one day, could not put it down. Great insight into the relationship challenges that the Bush's have faced.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: --George and Laura are real people--
Review: I really learned a great deal about the Bush family from this book, and I felt that it was a fair and unbiased biography of George and Laura Bush.

Beginning with early childhood, and the all the years in between, this book takes George and Laura all the way to the White House. The good times, the bad times and the wild times of George W. are here for all to read. He seemed to be a lovable child who had friends and was very popular. When he had any problems, he seemed to be able to handle whatever consequences that he faced and to land on his feet. The President was born with the gift of gab and could talk and charm his way out of most situations. Laura on the other hand appeared to be the dream daughter of doting parents. Their personalities are quite different. Laura is quiet, calm and pays a lot of attention to details. She's also very lady-like, kind to people and loves to read. George W. is more emotional, outspoken and seems to have a keen understanding of people and, is able to joke easily and put people at ease. He's proud of being a Texan, and enjoys that role in his public life. He's not stuffy and if he mispronounces a word or makes some type of social mistake, he laughs about it, even when the press responds with some type of critical comment. Laura knows how bright her husband is and she's resentful of the cracks that are sometimes made at his expense.

The President and First Lady are both loyal to family and friends and from what I took from this book, really compliment each other in their marriage relationship. Her calmness and gentleness seems to take the edge away from her husband's stronger personality when he might tend to be a little sarcastic. They each had a very tragic incident in their lives that made a lasting impression and perhaps gave them another connection. I enjoyed the excerpts about the President's parents and found the bound and closeness that they share to be touching. George W. and his father, sometimes refer to each other as Forty-one and Forty-three.

The book is well written and it has an enormous amount of information and details about the Bush family. I felt that the author Christopher Anderson did an amazing job of laying out the personalities of these two people and explaining how their families and the circumstances of their lives shaped their characters. I finished reading the book, knowing that President and Mrs. Bush are both strong and very intelligent people and I also learned that there is nothing phony about either one of them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A true and eventful look at a real American marriage
Review: I started reading this book on a Friday night and finished it on Saturday. It is such a welcoming look at a real marriage portrayole. It reminded me so much of my husband and myself, who also will be married 27 years this July. My Daughter read it first, brought it to me, now my son and husband are agruing who gets to read it next! Christopher Andersen did a great and explicit job of portraying these two intoxicating, loving, yet determined individuals in this book. Hats off to you. What a great read. I recomment this one at 5 stars!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A true and eventful look at a real American marriage
Review: I started reading this book on a Friday night and finished it on Saturday. It is such a welcoming look at a real marriage portrayole. It reminded me so much of my husband and myself, who also will be married 27 years this July. My Daughter read it first, brought it to me, now my son and husband are agruing who gets to read it next! Christopher Andersen did a great and explicit job of portraying these two intoxicating, loving, yet determined individuals in this book. Hats off to you. What a great read. I recomment this one at 5 stars!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A compelling look at the First Couple's unique partnership
Review: I suppose it is indicative of the times that we live in that the marriage of President George W. Bush and the First Lady is the subject of a book less than two years after they moved into the White House. However, it is refreshing to look at a solid partnership like this one after the endless tales that were news fodder with the previous First Couple.

There are no great surprises in GEORGE AND LAURA. The drama of the administration immediately preceding this one --- mysteriously convenient deaths, defensive secrets transferred to enemies of this country, the clandestine rendezvous with interns on the Presidential Seal --- is gone. George and Laura Bush are...boring. The most interesting tidbit in GEORGE AND LAURA is that George, during his misspent youth, served as a dinner escort for...Tricia Nixon.

Sure there was tragedy in both of their pasts --- the death of his sister and the accidental death of her friend, but none of this is news to most readers. And yes, the background on each of their families that opens the book succinctly fills in gaps for anyone who has not studied their world, but none of what we read is earth-shattering revelation.

To his credit, Andersen tries to liven things up; the tales told in GEORGE AND LAURA would be far less interesting in the hands of a lesser writer. But there's not much in the way of explosions, karate, and ripped bodices here. Yes the First Couple has trouble with their teenage daughters, but to anyone with a teenager in the house, this is hardly novel. George is an alcoholic, in recovery some 15 years now. His wayward youth is recounted in some detail, and it is impossible to read about his behavior in his younger days without noting that the immediate past president behaved in a similar manner. The difference between the two is that 42 never stopped. W's wild days --- the drinking, the wenching, the carousing --- are over. His predilection toward a well-turned ankle disappeared upon his engagement to Laura; his drinking stopped a few years after their marriage.

It may be politically incorrect to note that women, in general, have a civilizing effect on men, but the thrust of GEORGE AND LAURA is that in the case of the President and the First Lady it is undeniably true. However, to me, Andersen does not really give W enough credit for the cessation of his destructive behavior. You cannot effectively stop such behavior for someone; you have to do it for yourself. But Andersen's account certainly demonstrates his penultimate point, which is that Laura gave the President ample reason to reform.

Andersen, to his credit, subtly drives home that the predictability of the Bushes relationship is a good thing. The lack of high drama in their relationship to each other is matched by their quiet passion, their mutual love and, of equal importance, their respect for each other. The First Lady is strong enough to unconditionally support the President, even when she strongly disagrees with him; this gives him room to do what he does best, which is the job he was elected to do. As Andersen so brilliantly and succinctly concludes, it is in their very ordinariness that they have proven themselves to be extraordinary. It is a standard, and an example, to strive for.

The bonds in their relationship gave them strength as this presidency was tested by fire within its first nine months, and surpassed even unreasonable expectations. There are those who have suggested that Bush was transformed by monumental, monstrous tragedy from an inept figure to a strong leader. What this theory ignores is that the magnitude of the attack on September 11th was such that it did not leave room for a transformation; those effected either had the right stuff to rise to the occasion or they did not. Bush, by his actions, demonstrated and continues to demonstrate that he has it. And to some extent GEORGE AND LAURA explains why.

If there is a disappointment with GEORGE AND LAURA, it is that many of Christopher Andersen's journalistic sources are known to be hostile to the President. The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, Time, and other sourced periodicals have been uniformly, if predictably, anti-Bush since his nomination by the Republican Party. When Andersen quotes a columnist he quotes Molly Ivins, whose unrelenting hostility toward all matters Bush often approaches the level of incoherence. If there is a balance here, it is that Andersen is an obvious fan of Laura Bush; the thinly veiled thread that runs through GEORGE AND LAURA is his conclusion that Laura is the great woman behind the President.

As Andersen points out, Laura Bush does not consider being First Lady tantamount to having been elected co-president. She leaves him room to be great, while providing him with the additional incentive to do so. She coaxes, prods and helps him to refine his weaknesses --- his dress, his occasional tendency toward inappropriate goofiness, his much-reported malapropisms --- while at the same time adding to his considerable strengths in the areas of leadership, integrity and courage. This marriage is a partnership that makes both people stronger for its own strength. And their story is one that a lot of Americans can take stock in --- and feel good about leadership and values again.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub


<< 1 2 3 4 5 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates