David McCullough's work has almost everything one can wish for in a biography. After reading it, I feel as if I got to know Harry Truman personally. It is a rather voluminous book, covering Truman's childhood, early life, and extensive political career, but it is so gripping and readable you won't be able to put it down.
As McCullough acknowledges, the writing of his outstanding work had been significantly facilitated by Truman himself: the President poured himself out on paper "with vigor and candor" all his adult life, and made it possible for the author, through the great body of surviving letters, diaries, private memoranda, and autobiographical sketches, to go below the surface, to know what he felt, what he wanted, his worries, his anger, the exceptional and the commonplace details of his days.
Grown up in a family of farmers in Missouri, the self-educated Truman, who never attended college, had an almost ravenous interest in history. In his memoirs, he reports that as a boy he indulged in “endless reading of history,” a passion he continued as an adult. “I wanted to know what caused the successes or the failures of all the famous leaders of history.” He read Plutarch’s Lives, spent time on Abbott’s biographies of famous men, explored accounts of ancient Egypt, the Mesopotamian civilizations, Greece and Rome, ruminated on cultures of the Orient, read widely about modern nations, and tracked the drama of America’s birth and growth. His education gave him a solid grounding in his early years. But his need to earn a living soon overshadowed his academic pursuits – a career in business intervened. When he was thirty-three, however, and not having enjoyed great success, he quit his commercial work and went to France to fight in the World War I; he rose to the rank of captain. According to McCullough, that extraordinary and trying experience proved to him that he had leadership abilities.
The most captivating part of the book, of course, begins with his miraculous election to the US Senate, which was achieved with the help of the political machine of Tom Pendergast (T.J.), the saloonkeeper whose power was "greater than that of any political boss in the country". There, on Capitol Hill, we gain the most fascinating insight into Truman's personality. While despised by many senators for being "a guy . . . sent up [to Washington] by gangsters", he persevered to prove his diligence: most mornings, he turned up at his office so early – about seven – and so in advance of everyone else in the building that it was decided he should have his own passkey, reportedly the first ever issued to a senator. Unlike most senators, Truman was no orator and made no brilliant speeches (He dared to propose his first bill after whole four months in the Senate.), but he demonstrated a strong desire to learn; he sat in the back row of the top-heavy Democratic side of the Senate at every session, listening, absorbing, learning. Later, in 1941, the gained experience combined with his straightforward personality contributed to the great success of the Truman Committee that was established to investigate all activities involving national defense. It is during the Committee's hearings that warm-hearted, easygoing Truman's persistence and toughness emerged, showing a side most people didn't know existed.
McCullough devotes a substantial part of the biography to Harry Truman's political campaigns. Although they are maybe too detailed for my taste, they provide valuable insight into how Truman inexhaustible energy and determination. It was interesting to read about the backstairs schemes during his run for Vice President, but I won't spoil this chapter for you; it is enough to say that Roosevelt appears as impossible to decipher as ever, and this leads to some curious results...
To say that Truman was prepared for the presidency would be an overstatement. In his twelve-week tenure as Roosevelt’s second in command, he had remained a complete outsider. By the time when, on April 12, 1945, FDR died, Truman had seen the president officially only eight times. Roosevelt had fully excluded him from his decision-making process regarding foreign affairs, this denying his green successor the needed opportunity to gain experience. While the new president wasn't as as naïve a man as some Americans suspected, he was a newbie in foreign affairs, and committed diplomatic blunders. (As the wife of Robert A. Taft, the conservative senator from Ohio, had remarked, "To err is Truman.") One of the most conspicuous was the harsh tone he adopted during a meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov; Molotov, visibly offended, took the President's behavior for a confirmation that the years of cooperation between the USSR and America had indeed ended, a perception that, in combination with other misconceptions and suspicions, would lead to the Cold War.
Highly challenging were the issues that Roosevelt had left Truman to untangle. For example, although the new President had been aware of the Manhattan Project since the time he headed the Truman Committee, he knew nothing of its purpose because Secretary of War Stimson had asked for permission not to reveal a secret that only four people in the world knew. One can only imagine what a bombshell revelation the possession by the USA of an atomic bomb, the most formidable weapon ever created, must have been for him.
Another issue was the Poland question. Since Poland was a nation with many emigrants to the States, Americans did not want it to be absorbed by the USSR, which had claimed it as a part of the proposed Soviet post-war security zone; because of public discontent, the issue turned into a political one. FDR, though, was more concerned with maintaining wartime solidarity, so he postponed the settlement of Poland's fate, thus making it the inexperienced Truman's problem, which he, exasperated by Molotov's obstinacy, handled rather undiplomatically.
McCullough's work has one drawback that has to be noted. He pays too little attention to Truman's decision-making process in regard to a number of key episodes, such as, for instance, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Well, the President was, indeed, silent in his journal on the fateful day he made the decision in Potsdam, and this is understandable. (Who wouldn't have been in his place?) But still... There is little information on the deterioration of Soviet-American relations and the Korean War. Truman's second term is also described primarily through his sensational campaign, a miraculous, unpredicted victory over the Republican, anti-Communist candidate Thomas E. Dewey, and through his subsequent search for a suitable Democratic candidate to success him in the White House and to continue his policy. (He tried recruiting General Dwight Eisenhower, the most popular man in the States at the time, but failed – Ike became the Republican Party's candidate instead.)
What is a really brilliantly depicted in McCullough's biography are Truman's personal relationships with his beloved wife Bess, their adored daughter Margaret, his mother, sister Mary Jane, and cousins Ethel and Nellie Noland. Curious are also Truman's often inexplainable friendships and partnerships, such as that with the elegant, polished Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, whose place in the Cabinet was unrivaled. That Harry Truman of Missouri, product of the Pendergast machine, could possibly have anything in common with Dean Gooderham Acheson, "Groton ’11, Yale ’15, Harvard Law ’19," or feel at ease in such a partnership, struck many as almost ludicrous. At first glance, Acheson seemed to be everything the President despised, "the ultimate 'striped pants boy.'" Yet, among the "clannish and snooty" members of the State Department, which – according to Truman – were extremely bright people who made tremendous college marks but who had had very little association with actual people down to the ground, Acheson was doing a “whale of a job," and the President hoped he would never leave the government.
In my opinion, David McCullough has also done "a whale of a job." Despite the drawback I mentioned, this is a presidential biography at its finest. It creates a uniquely wholesome picture of Harry Truman and his administration; all characters, from minor to major, are coming to life under McCullough's pen. We are always at the President's side, at his highs and at his lows; we get to know his courage, determination, candor, and occasional mistakes. Furthermore, this masterly account handles an enormous amount of of material with such deftness that one can't help but be astonished. TRUMAN is a long, thoroughly absorbing work that deserves much more than five stars.