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| 2008 Election: | McCain's book | Obama's book | Biden's book | Palin's booklet | Keyes' book | Nader's book | Barr's book | 2008 Debates |
Hard Call Great Decisions and the Extraordinary People Who Made Them, by John McCain & Mark Salter ![]() (Click for Amazon book review) BOOK REVIEW by OnTheIssues.org: "Hard Call" might better be called "Hard Reading." My readers know that I enjoy reading political books -- but this one was, well, unenjoyable. I think the reason is that it is, in effect, a sequel -- pretty much the same idea as Why Courage Matters, McCain's 2004 equivalent. McCain's earlier book, as well as this one, have the same formula: Teach lessons about courage by examples in recent history. Astute readers might be reminded of a much earlier book, "Profiles in Courage," by John F. Kennedy, another book that followed that same formula. I think McCain was well aware of that association, and chose the word "Courage" in his earlier book's title to emphasize the connection. In that sense, this book is the THIRD in a series. A "Hard Call", according to McCain, is where a person faces a difficult decision and makes a courageous choice. Not too much different than "Why Courage Matters" or a "Profile in Courage," in practice. McCain is more analytically organized in this book: he outlines six characteristics that define courageous hard calls: Awareness, Foresight, Timing, Confidence, Humility, and Inspiration. For each characteristic, he provides 3 or 4 examples of hard calls, mostly from 20th-century American history, but a few from abroad as well. The reason this book is hard to read is because it is simply too long. There are just too many examples, of too many people, with too little connection to anything relevant about courage or hard calls. McCain might have looked to JFK's book, which had eight -- just eight! -- profiles in courage, all of US Senators. Or he might have looked to his earlier book, which also had a much tighter focus. Nevertheless, McCain did choose to publish THIS version for his presidential run, so we'll outline the Table of Contents, with his 6-part structure, and list some of the exemplary people and incidents he writes about:
I would not complain if the examples were focused on the "hard call." But they're not. McCain feels obligated not only to explain the details of the "hard call" itself, but then to provide a complete background on the history leading up to it, and sometimes on the history leading up to THAT. Do we really want to hear, from a presidential candidate, the historical basis for the movie "Chariots of Fire"? (p. 352) or the biography of the inventor of the Morse code (p. 161)? When McCain describes the invention of the Gillette razor, he not only provides a biography of K.C. Gillette, but also the full story of Gillete's early boss, the inventor of the soda bottle cap, which inspired Gillette. Why, the reader might ask, does a presidential candidate's book have four pages (p. 270-273) dedicated to soda bottle caps? The best I can say is that it feels a lot like that radio guy, Paul Harvey, who tells us "The Rest Of The Story." But Paul Harvey's shticks only last a minute, while McCain's go on for hundreds of pages. So, why then did McCain choose this topic, and this length book, as the literary face of his presidential campaign? I don't have an answer for that. The best I can do is answer by analogy: I enjoyed the movie "Jaws" much more than its sequel "Jaws III". I think McCain has the same problem here. -- Jesse Gordon, jesse@OnTheIssues.org, Feb. 2008
Great Decisions and the Extraordinary People Who Made Them, by John McCain & Mark Salter.
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