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The Reagan Diaries
by Ronald Reagan
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In Ronald Reagan's own words, these diary entries provide an up-close and personal account of how the 40th president viewed his daily life, public and private. His love of his wife, Nancy; his relations with world leaders; his acerbic view of the press; and his encounters with everyday Americans comprise this record of the thoughts of "the great communicator," as he was called, and the three thousand days that made history. Historian David Brinkley assembled these entries and provides commentary.
Available editions of The Reagan Diaries
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9780061558337,
Paperback,
Perennial,
2009
Other copies of 9780061558337 |
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9780061285646,
Compact Disc,
Harperaudio,
2007
Other copies of 9780061285646 |
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Publisher Notes
Culled from his handwritten daily diaries, an account of the fortieth president's eight years in the oval office offers insight into his character as well as the behind-the-scenes factors that contributed to such events as his first inauguration and the end of the Cold War. Simultaneous.
Media Reviews
"Complicated matters of state are reduced to their essence, jostling for prominence in the late president's mind with infinitely more mundane matters."
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