The thirty-first of March : an intimate portrait of Lyndon Johnson's final days in office

by Horace W. Busby

Hardcover, 2005

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005.

Description

I have made up my mind. I can't get peace in Vietnam and be President too. So begins this posthumously discovered account of Lyndon Johnson's final days in office. The Thirty-First of March is an indelible portrait of a president and a presidency at a time of crisis, spanning twenty years of a close working and personal relationship between Johnson and Horace Busby. It was Busby's job to put a little Churchill into Johnson's orations, and his skill earned him a position of trust from the earliest days of Johnson's career as a congressman in Texas to the twilight of his presidency. From the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination, when Busby was asked by the newly sworn-in president to sit by his bedside during his first troubled nights in office, to the concerns that defined the Great Society, Busby not only articulated and refined Johnson's political thinking, he helped shape the most ambitious, farreaching legislative agenda since FDR's New Deal. Here is Johnson the politician, Johnson the schemer, Johnson who advised against JFK riding in an open limousine that fateful day in Dallas, and Johnson the father, sickened by the men fighting and dying in Vietnam on his behalf. Johnson's presidency.… (more)

Language

Barcode

11187
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