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Full Disclosure

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Only one man could have written this book——a man with all the remarkable insight and behind-the-scenes knowledge of a former presidential aide and the style and tightly-packed prose of one of the best-known columnists on the New York Times. With Full Disclosure William Safire has produced the most breathtakingly exciting best-seller of the decade. In this totally absorbing and gripping novel, William Safire examines the exercise of power——power as an end in itself rather than as a means of carrying out policies; its uses and abuses; its pleasures and miseries; its acquisition and surrender, and above all the lengths to which men will go to keep it. In the world of international politics in the not too distant future, there is a new line-up of world powers. An alliance of China with Japan menaces the Western world, and there is imminent danger that Russia will join the Far East axis... A helicopter is ambushed in the Crimea. Aboard are the General Secretary of the Communist Party and his official guest, the President of the United States. The Russian is killed, the injured American is evacuated, and arrives back in Washington sound in mind and body, except for one major he can no longer see.

509 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1977

2 people are currently reading
107 people want to read

About the author

William Safire

99 books55 followers
William Lewis Safire was an American author, columnist, journalist and presidential speechwriter.

He was perhaps best known as a long-time syndicated political columnist for the New York Times and a regular contributor to "On Language" in the New York Times Magazine, a column on popular etymology, new or unusual usages, and other language-related topics.

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5 stars
25 (23%)
4 stars
31 (29%)
3 stars
38 (36%)
2 stars
8 (7%)
1 star
3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for zandrama.
188 reviews3 followers
January 5, 2021
Så... Okej. Den här boken är verkligen skriven ur sin tid. Kalla kriget, kärnvapenrädsla, rädsla för ryssen, USA som högsta makt. Samtidigt är berättelsen väldigt långsam, eller snarare väldigt typiskt för tiden boken skrevs.

Inte riktigt min genre och inte egentligen en dålig bok, men min upplevelse gör att den får en trea.
345 reviews2 followers
February 16, 2017
This is a brilliant, if sadly superannuated thriller written in the post-Watergate era by a man who was not an author of fiction by trade but really managed to pull it off when he tried his hand at it. And he even managed to keep his self-insert from any excessive awesomeness or focus in the story. Safire. Zohar. Nobody will ever see through your cunning disguise sir. I picked it up out of curiosity over how he would sell "The president is suddenly blind and people are going to decide that that means it's an appropriate moment to try to invoke the 25th Amendment." Hard to buy phrased that way, but Safire really managed to work it out and and sell it in a way that works.
11 reviews
August 21, 2012
Took me a while to read this but I gained some valuable insights into how politics works and how the press can be manipulated as well as how the press can do the manipulating. The most important thing I learned? Whatever you hear or read from the news media, think of just the opposite and then find the middle between the two extremes. You'll be a whole lot closer to the truth.
Profile Image for ChrisGA.
1,264 reviews
April 12, 2019
Older book that seems just as possible today. What a mess politics appears to be.
68 reviews
April 21, 2020
Fiction story of the US President who was blinded as a result of a helicopter crash in the former Soviet Union. Sounds like a real page turner but it wasn't .
967 reviews7 followers
April 8, 2023
Started slowly but, at about the halfway point, it really picked up. I liked it better than I expected and think any West Wing fan would enjoy it
8 reviews
December 10, 2025
This book was great find about a president who is has become blind in a time of crisis and the application of the Twenty Fifth Amendment.
Profile Image for Tristan Wilkinson.
53 reviews
September 7, 2025
I think that every presidential candidate should be forced to read this novel and if they react poorly to the themes and messaging of Full Disclosure they should be banned from ever taking office.

It's crazy how the most obvious ficticious aspect of this novel is how the present is genuinely well-meaning and concerned about the state of the country's people.

Definitely a product of its time, made most noticable by it's treatment of women, but the narrative is so gripping and the characters are so well fleshed out - good and bad - that I found this an incredible read.
Profile Image for F.C. Etier.
Author 2 books37 followers
December 16, 2012
Watch for my review soon at my National History Examiner site.

Safire's prose is as near perfection as was Truman Capote.
His experience gives readers a unique insight to life in the White House and how the unseen world of politics functions.

Great story, well told.
Profile Image for Terry Morrison.
85 reviews3 followers
October 25, 2013
A good book but kind of convoluted. Interesting situation involving the president being blinded and all the machinations behind the scene to manage the presidency. It seems funny to consider arab-Israeli and Japanese-Chinese alliances, among others.
93 reviews
February 18, 2011
This book is for all political junkies who want to understand what goes on behind closed doors in the White House. It is an enteraining book with a little drama. All in all a pleasant read.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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