Metacritic Books

President Reagan
by Richard Reeves

ISBN: 0743230221
Simon & Schuster, 592 pages, $30.00
Nonfiction Biographies & Memoirs, History
Released 12/20/2005

The Presidential biographer chronicles Ronald Reagan's eight years in office.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

66 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Publishers Weekly
Reeves is particularly strong at portraying Reagan's almost organically intuitive approach to management. [21 Nov 2005, p.39]
Outstanding The Observer Terry Golway
An invaluable contribution to our understanding of the man and the times. [9 Jan 2006, p.11]
Outstanding Washington Post Jon Meacham
Readers are in Reeves's debt for this entertaining, deeply reported and revealing portrait of a man destined to be in death what he was in life: a figure of enduring fascination.
Favorable Library Journal Michael O. Eshleman
Combining interviews, archival research, and a hearty dose of the press accounts of the day, Reeves's narrative is especially good at covering the assassination attempt and the Reykjavik summit with Soviet leader Gorbachev. [1 Dec 2005, p.142]
Favorable Booklist Gilbert Taylor
Meticulous and fair, Reeves sets the bar for the historian who would attempt a definitive history of the Reagan years. [15 Nov 2005, p.4]
Favorable The New York Times Book Review Adrian Wooldridge
In one area Reeves scores a bull's-eye: exposing the sheer strangeness of the Reagan years.
Favorable USA Today Deirdre Donahue
A cogent, evenhanded, in-depth examination of the Reagan presidency.
Favorable Boston Globe David Gergen
Just as Reagan had his many flaws, so does this book. It is long on detail, especially in describing small, messy wars in Central America, and short on reflection...Still, in a field of more than 900 books about Reagan, many of them shlock, this is one of the most serious and valuable.
Favorable Houston Chronicle John W. Sloan
Reeves is particularly good at conveying the roller-coaster character of the Reagan presidency, which saw great achievements and several failures.
Mixed Los Angeles Times Richard Rayner
Reeves takes us through these years, past the signpost events, with clumps of often stodgy detail and not much insight into Reagan's mental process. But then, Reagan was a self-isolator, not a self-explainer.
Mixed San Francisco Chronicle Michael Roth
There is much description and little analysis.
Mixed Christian Science Monitor Erik Spanberg
Little of the material Reeves offers is new. But revisiting the Reagan Revolution in the context of today's post-9/11 domestic and global politics is instructive - and at times downright disturbing.
Mixed Kirkus Reviews
Under Reagan, recently all but canonized, the economy suffered, big government grew bigger, the military got new toys but not better soldiers or leaders. And as for national pride...[15 Nov 2005, p.1224]
Mixed The Economist
Most of his material is second-hand and the accumulation of detail, especially contemporary newspaper accounts, is sometimes exhausting. But his main technique, of telescoping in on individual dramas of the presidency, does produce some memorable set pieces.
Mixed The Independent Cal McCrystal
The book is extremely rich in anecdote on the frailties of Reagan officials, the ideological struggle that was tipping America further to the right, neuroses of both East and West, and corporate, governmental and individual responses to humanity in crisis.
Terrible The New York Times Michiko Kakutani
An embarrassing hodgepodge of fact and fiction narrated by an imaginary alter ego... Most of Mr. Reeves's observations about Reagan are either poorly supported contrarian assertions or shop-worn clichés.

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