I enjoyed this book, although I thought he could have pared it down to at least 400 pages. That of course was when I was struggling at about that point to keep reading. It was 573 pages on my Sony Pocket Reader.
Great insight into the man, his experiences, his perspective, his humor and his integrity. Once again, as with Decision Points, gives understanding to the changing dynamics and sometimes not so clear lines a President actually faces with the decisions they have to make.
I remember many of the events he speaks of. Watergate, his loyalty, ongoing friendship and admiration of Nixon even as he was terribly let down and disillusioned at the time. His time as Director of CIA during Ford's administration, meeting with Carter after his election, his honest and reserved appraisal of Carter's administration. Even in that he shows constraint and respect.
His Vice-Presidency and growing respect for Reagan. He says very little about Clinton, focusing instead on his retirement from politics, and his life after. There the man really starts shining through. His humor becomes more evident. His letter on losing e-mail because they had to shut down the server due to a virus will make you laugh as he dramatizes his addiction to it and being cut-off and alone--isolated for several hours. If anyone needs to talk to him they'll have to pick up the phone and call! Or the last letter on aging and the differences he's noticing. How he selectively hears, and doesn't always remember. Funny and bittersweet.
Throughout his years in politics he shares his philosophy, conservative, pragmatic, realistic, but not extreme. He speaks of his time in China, of promoting trade and loans to them at that time. I believe this book was done in the 90's, but I couldn't help wondering if, in hindsight, this dedication to their development was such a good idea. Seems to have come back and bit us. I wonder what his thoughts are privately today, in almost 2012.
He notes his privileged background, almost defensively in the early years. He seems to want to be seen as relating the 'common man', but really his some might say 'elitist' status and attitude shines through pretty brightly. He speaks of associations and opportunities this privileged background gives him in casual terms. Taking for granted those things without the real ability to understand the majority would never have them--even to parachute jumping with the best. Later, as he grows older, he acknowledges it, relating his time as a pilot in WWII to Tom Brokaw as the time 'Coming out of a privileged background, I had very little exposure to the real world---to people of very different backgrounds', the camaraderie he had with other pilots. But the man cut half on the deck of the carrier by a propeller during a bad landing was a 'deck hand', with little notice or mention. This attitude, when it appeared really bothered me throughout the book.
All in all, I certainly recommend this book. The format in letter's, some formal many not, provided many insights into the times, the people and the man who was part of those decisions. And their humanity.