There is much here for people to admire as well as carp at, I suppose. I served at State under Powell, and found service in his Department to be very enjoyable. I recall some of the career Foreign Service types sharpening their knives almost as soon as he was sworn in. DeYoung describes an exchange recalling that Madeleine Albright had real problems, as well, with the career FS types - I guess it goes with the bureaucratic landscape.
I did learn a bit about race in this volume. Powell and his family, hailing from Jamaica, had quite different views on race, even growing up in Brooklyn, that American Blacks did not share. My guess would have to be that some American Blacks would not allow Powell among their ranks.
On balance, I admire Powell's performance; however, (and here I see similarities to my own military service), our generation had quite different outlooks on what it takes to succeed from that of WWII vets. Powell should have been GREAT, I pose, and was really only VERY, VERY GOOD. The descriptions of the infighting in the (Dubya) Bush WH, with the Cheney, Rumsfeld, Armitage, and Rice crowd reveal to me that he was really a political neophyte - and I wonder if, had he served in WWII, he might have been quickly replaced in a really important campaign for being less than effective.
crowd
In any case, a very interesting look at a true soldier and patriot.