Breach of Faith: The Fall of Richard Nixon

by Theodore H. White

Paperback, 1976

Publication

Dell (1976), Edition: First Edition

Original publication date

1975

Description

This book describes Richard Nixon's rise and fall in politics. The Nixon crisis of 1973-1974 threatened the nation in ways we did not immediately understand. Stripped of drama and confusion, however, the problem was that our President had placed himself above the law. The nation had to decide whether that could be allowed. This story starts with the last days of Richard Nixon in the White House -- as those closest recognized that he had deceived them and that they must force him out. The thread of manipulation is traced back to its origin 20 years earlier and shows how the Nixon team came to see politics as war in which no quarter was given, in which the White House was a command post where ordinary rules did not apply, where power could be used without restraint. -- Publisher description.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member carterchristian1
The Watergate literature is extensive.White wrote this book however from the unique experiences of having written books on all three of Nixon's run for the presidency. One Amazon reviewer writes that it was especially good in providing context which other personal experiences, even Woodward and
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Bernstein did not. White began covering Nixon in 1955. From tiem to time he refers to his own personal experience and Nixon interviews. There are no notes or references, only a list of individuals who helped with the research, which is aweakness. However, clearly to get this out in1975 the author had to act quickly.

The writing moves the reader along at a pleasant pace. All participants have well developed biographies.
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Language

Original language

English

ISBN

0440007801 / 9780440007807

Physical description

6.9 inches

Rating

½ (33 ratings; 3.9)
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