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The Invincible Quest : The Life of Richard Milhous Nixon

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"The Invincible Quest" is an authoritative biography of one of the most accomplished and controversial political leaders of the 20th century.

Beginning with Nixon's birth to Quaker parents in 1913 and ending with his death in 1994, Conrad Black traces Nixon's career, assessing both his achievements and the evolution of popular and historical thinking about him since his death.

Nixon rose spectacularly from modest beginnings to become Dwight D.

Eisenhower's vice-president in 1952 at the age of just 39.

Defeated by John Kennedy in the presidential election of 1960, and humiliated in Californian elections two years later, his political career looked to be finished.

But he returned from the wilderness to snatch victory in the presidential election of 1968, and in 1972 was re-elected in one of the biggest landslides in US presidential history.

Then came Watergate, the shame of resignation, and the long road to redemption. Drawing on recently opened tapes and documents, and on Black's personal interviews with many of the major players in the Nixon administration, "The Invincible Quest" reveals a new side of Nixon: a man who didn't have the advantage of charisma but was surprisingly self-assured and effective; a man dogged by political scandal yet seemingly unstoppable.

Black tells the extraordinary story of Nixon's meteoric rise, scandalous fall and partial rehabilitation in the fast-paced and supremely readable style that characterized his earlier, best-selling work, "Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Champion of Freedom" (2003).

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Product Details
Quercus Publishing
184724209X / 9781847242099
Hardback
22/05/2007
United Kingdom
English
ix, 1152 p., [16] p. of plates : ill.
24 cm
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