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American Notebook: A Personal and Political Journey

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One of the rewards extended to former editors—if they are lucky and get to plan their departure—is that they can choose their next assignment. I had no doubt about what I to be Washington correspondent for The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald . There was no more important and interesting international story to cover than the United States at the beginning of George W. Bush's second term. The war in Iraq was going badly, and it was not at all clear that the war on terror was being won—or even if there was any agreement that it was, in fact, a war.

When veteran journalist Michael Gawenda was posted to the USA as a Washington correspondent in 2005, George W. Bush was beginning his second term, and the war in Iraq was showing signs of becoming a quagmire. Two years later, Bush is a lame duck president and most Americans want their troops out of Iraq. American Notebook is Gawenda's absorbing and insightful account of his American posting.

Weaving the personal into the political, Gawenda takes the reader on his journey into a country he has always loved. Beyond daily life in Washington, he visits hurricane-ravaged New Orleans and the God-fearing states of the Midwest. His engaging analysis of politics and current events is interwoven with his reflections on his childhood as a post-war Jewish refugee, growing up in the sixties in a Melbourne steeped in American culture. In light of the increasingly evident failure of efforts in Iraq, he revisits his own controversial decision while editor of The Age newspaper to support the Howard Government's decision in 2003 to join the coalition of the willing.

American Notebook is a fascinating discussion of the role of journalism and the nature of public debate about war, politics and current events.

288 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2007

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Michael Gawenda

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758 reviews17 followers
December 30, 2025
I really like Gawenda's writing. Clear, concise, with lots of introspection - writing that makes you pause and reflect. This book is an account of his time as a correspondent in Washington during the 2nd Iraq war. The Iraq war bits I found tedious - nothing dates quicker than analysing a war in progress, but what I did love was his weaving into the narrative his father's fascination with Yiddish America and how that affected the son. Gawenda also writes presciently about the emergence of the "Israel Lobby" and the latent anti-semitism bubbling under the surface - a current that would erupt into the open after October 7. Reading this nearly 20 years later was deeply unsettling for me. The warning signs were there but no-one noticed or took them seriously
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