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A biographical profile of a former Vice President of the United States, covering the last twenty years of his life.
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Previews available in: English
Edition | Availability |
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1
Hubert: The triumph and tragedy of the Humphrey I knew
1979, Putnam
in English
0399123148 9780399123146
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2
Hubert: The Triumph and Tragedy of the Humphrey I Knew
1979, Putnam
in English
0399123148 9780399123146
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes index.
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The Physical Object
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Scriblio MARC recordIthaca College Library MARC record
University of Prince Edward Island MARC record
Internet Archive item record
Library of Congress MARC record
marc_uic MARC record
marc_columbia MARC record
Better World Books record
harvard_bibliographic_metadata record
Work Description
Humphrey's personal physician and close friend seems to have a two-fold purpose: to eulogize HH and blast those who didn't appreciate his ""sensitivity and loyalty""--like ""naturally arrogant and dominating"" LBJ. Edgar Berman (The Solid Gold Stethoscope) met Humphrey in the late Fifties, and their friendship spanned the Vice-Presidency, Vietnam, Humphrey's '68 defeat, and final years; but the chronology is sometimes confused--Berman reminiscing about events before describing them--and the character analyses are superficial. Humphrey was ""a political mutant""--unchanged by power, pressure, or adversity. He was loyal and he was earthy (unlike McGovern and Mondale who, Berman writes, ""quickly took to well-tailored Bond Street suits and Gucci loafers""). True, he never stood up to Joe McCarthy, talked too much, and was chronically late. But Berman says his staff was ""weak"" and given to ""wanton"" abuse of petty cash; and Humphrey was betrayed by the likes of Mondale (in '68), Coretta King and Jesse Jackson (in '72), and even Walter Cronkite--""that epitome of avuncular rectitude,"" who ""played up"" the Chicago convention troubles ""as if they were Humphrey's fault entirely."" Humphrey disliked Nixon, Eugene McCarthy, Joe Califano, and Robert McNamara (HH: that ""robot brain with the slicked down stacomb look""); and he referred to LBJ as a ""no-good son of a bitch"" after the Presidential threat to ""dry up every Democratic dollar"" in '68 because HH wavered on Vietnam (according to Berman, Humphrey's true anti-war feelings never came out). Considering Humphrey's yen to be liked, one wonders if he would appreciate all this bad-mouthing--the only thing that livens up the book.
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