Condoleezza Rice: An American Life Audiobook By Elisabeth Bumiller cover art

Condoleezza Rice: An American Life

A Biography

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Condoleezza Rice: An American Life

By: Elisabeth Bumiller
Narrated by: Kimberly Farr
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About this listen

Condoleezza Rice has until now remained a mystery behind an elegant, cool veneer. In this stunning new biography, New York Times reporter Elisabeth Bumiller peels back the layers and presents a revelatory portrait of the first Black female secretary of state and President George W. Bush's national security adviser on September 11, 2001. The audiobook relates the personal voyage of a young Black woman out of the segregated American South and also tells the sweeping story of a tumultuous half-century in the nation's history.

In Condoleezza Rice: An American Life, we see Rice's Alabama childhood in Birmingham when it was the central battleground of the civil rights movement, her education in foreign policy, and her confrontations with minorities and women while she was provost at Stanford University in the 1990s. Examining the current administration, Bumiller explores in depth Rice's extraordinarily close relationship with George W. Bush, her battles with Vice President Dick Cheney, and her indirect but crucial role in the ousting of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Bumiller shows us Rice missing clues to the September 11 attacks and waging war against Saddam Hussein. In addition, we watch Rice's recent attempts to salvage the ruins of the Iraq policy she helped create and to avoid war with Iran.

Drawing on extensive interviews with Rice and more than 150 others, Bumiller explores Rice's effectiveness as national security adviser and secretary of state, her longtime political ambitions, and her future on the world stage.

©2007 Elisabeth Bumiller (P)2007 Books on Tape
Cultural & Regional Politicians Politics & Activism Women Middle east Biography National Security Iran War American Foreign Policy Social justice Africa Espionage Socialism
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Writer gives the good and bad of a complex world power.

Objective View of a Public Figure

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The author seems pretty tentative in her assessment of Rice.

The narrator should be taught how to pronounce "February," as her pronunciation (Febber-erry) is very distracting.

Tentative

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In Clockwork Orange fashion, Liberalism punishes Madam Secretary Rice through melodramatic waterboarding of conservative values. The author and the reader paint a whitewashed and accidentally successful coattail rider of white privilege. You may think the truth lies somewhere in the middle, but any opposing view would place the middle on the far-left. Only Liberals should purchase this book as motivation for their own cause. This author would not pass genuine scrutiny for many of her claims.

Backhanded compliments stuffed with hyperbolic liberal goo.

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The author isn;t writing this with an open mind. I wasted my money

if you hate her read this

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The contrast of the two view points - that is the "helpless victim mentality" of the left, as presented by the author and the "no victims allowed" philosophy of Rice's parents is very obvious. The left leaning slant of this book is anything but objective. Ms Bumlier takes every opportunity she can to create class envy and typical rich vs poor babble to minimize the hard work and positive attitude of Condoleezza Rice's family. I learned more about slanted journalism than I did Rice.

Contrast of two viewpoints

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A piece that could have only been written against a conservative African American woman and tolerated by the media powers that be.... “...a dog that didn’t bark but should have...” The author explicitly states Condoleezza Rice is the dog....

Very opinionated perspective by the author

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I am impressed by the research that went into this book and the analysis of Condelezza Rice’s life and time in public office. Well worth the time to listen.

Fascinating

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