cover image A Complicated Man: The Life of Bill Clinton as Told by Those Who Know Him

A Complicated Man: The Life of Bill Clinton as Told by Those Who Know Him

Michael Takiff, Yale Univ., $32.50 (528p) ISBN 978-0-300-12130-8

Oral historian and journalist Takiff (Brave Men, Gentle Heroes) offers a wealth of perspective to counter—or at least complicate—the prevailing, and simplistic, image many people hold of America's 42nd president, despite two prosperous terms and a decade of post-White House foreign relations work. Somewhat predictably, Takiff begins with Clinton's birth to a recently widowed mother in Hope, Ark. and ends, more or less, with wife Hillary Rodham Clinton's failure to win the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008. Throughout, Clinton's life is addressed by those who knew him, loved him, or, in some cases, loathed him. Chapters are introduced with snippets of conversation and deepened by excerpts of interviews, many of which Takiff conducted himself, with a wide range of people, from unknown residents of Hope to Bob Dole, Michael Dukakis, Tom Brokaw, Clinton staff members Leon Panetta, Dan Glickman, and Charlene Barshefsky, and many others. The author places everything in context and provides sufficient history to tell the full story, resulting in a book that reads like a conversation between 150 people gathered to reminisce about a complicated man. (Oct.)