![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Frank portrays Truman so well that the book’s ending feels like an anticlimax. Frank spends a large amount of time on Truman’s family life, movingly depicting his marriage to Bess Truman, who loathed Washington and fiercely guarded her privacy. It is an approach that fits his subject: Frank’s depiction of Truman is of a man perpetually outside his comfort zone, preferring bourbon and branch water in his home of Independence, Missouri, to martinis on the DC cocktail circuit. This is a character study of an introverted personality in a profession that rewards loud performance. It is a humbler, more focused book, with Truman’s pre-presidential life relegated to an extended prologue. Frank frames his subject in a different way from David McCullough’s completist, Pulitzer Prize–winning doorstopper. a book that, in its timing, acts almost as a blueprint for a liberal president to navigate a challenging world, focused through the prism of a man who was nobody’s real first choice for president and yet forged an envious record. ![]()
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