List price: $27.00 (that's 30% off!)
List price: $16.00 (that's 30% off!)
Based on his extensive research Dobbs now argues that Albright almost certainly knew she was from a Jewish family - many of whom perished in the Holocaust - well before she has said that she did. Like many immigrants from Europe, Joseph Korbel, her father, wanted to put a fire wall between the tragic past and his new identity in the West. He instilled that drive for a new identity in his ambitious daughter, Dobbs says, and it propelled her to the top.
In light of the current Kosovo situation, with Albanian refugees fleeing their homeland in a harkening back to WWII, this first-rate book is mandatory reading for anyone who wants to understand the mind set of the Secretary of State and why we are involved in Kosovo.
Neither sassy nor seeking learned patronage, Blackman does nothing more than bandy a load of facts in her first book. One becomes reticent to believe she could ever have risen to be a deputy chief editor for a famous magazine because the reporting style used throughout is so unembellished.
The story of Madeleine's childhood and then time spent in London during the Second World War is very long, the future ambassador to the UN is still a young girl half-way through the book. There are some Eastern details of politics, of which I know little, so that was a highlight. It's arbitrary the importance of the cabinet positions and all the jobs of Madeleine Albright's father. Several recurring lengthy accounts are here of the publicized discovery of the fate of her grandparents during the war, and the cousin's life, who remained in Czechoslovakia, is also underpinned.
An example of the repetition: 'From an early age, she had learned to adapt, whether in language, culture, academic mores, or national politics' p.197.
Mostly, it seems that Blackman and Albright did not cooperate much in the production of this biography, probably because of the disparities and oppositions in the way their individual careers evolved: Albright does appear to have been in the catbird seat for a long time after her arrival to America, before slipping into highly responsible, visible and plum political roles. She had, after all, married newspaper magnet man Joseph Albright, and she had all the right connections and was well set for the political perfection which followed, with some of her own hard work and contacts (note the Golden Girls' supper reunions).
This is, simply, not a biography illustrated by the political career for which the subject is more known for.
List price: $16.95 (that's 30% off!)
Where was the editor when this book was being written? Why was this author chosen to write this biography? Surely there must be credible authors able to recount a far more analytical and balanced story than Thomas Blood.