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Beskrivning
This volume continues the ambitious project, undertaken by the Miller Center at the University of Virginia, to transcribe and annotate secretly recorded White House tapes. The tapes presented here begin on the day after the Cuban Missile Crisis—and run to 7 February 1963.
The director of the Miller Center’s Presidential Recordings Program, David G. Coleman is a history professor at the University of Virginia. He lives in Arlington. Timothy Naftali, a frequent contributor to Slate and NPR, is director of the federal Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. He lives in Los Angeles, California. Philip D. Zelikow was executive director of the 9/11 Commission. He is the White Burkett Miller Professor of History at the University of Virginia.
Recensioner i media
"These volumes of presidential recordings both fascinate and illuminate. They show how John F. Kennedy reached his vital decisions, and they cast important new light on the conflicts of our times. This is history in the raw, and it is compelling." -- Arthur Schlesinger Jr. "A meticulous, thoughtfully rendered set of volumes that offer us the sharpest, clearest, and truest picture of the presidency during a high age of American power. The tense debate, the confusion, the insights, the jokes, the courage-it's all there, as it really happened. This is the true West Wing." -- Evan Thomas "These volumes will intrigue the general reader and keep historians working hard for a long time as we assess and reassess John Kennedy's presidency." -- Michael Beschloss "There is nothing comparable to this multivolume collection of presidential materials. This work is and will be an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the twentieth-century American presidency. It provides us with unprecedented insight into policymaking at the highest level." -- Robert Dallek