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| The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made | 
enlarge | Authors: Walter Isaacson, Evan Thomas Publisher: Simon & Schuster Category: Book
List Price: $22.00 Buy New: $12.49 You Save: $9.51 (43%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 13829
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 864 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.4 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.6
ISBN: 0684837714 Dewey Decimal Number: 920 EAN: 9780684837710 ASIN: 0684837714
Publication Date: June 4, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Publisher's Overstock, Excellent Condition, may have remainder mark
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Product Description A captivating blend of personal biography and public drama, The Wise Men introduces the original best and brightest, leaders whose outsized personalities and actions brought order to postwar chaos: Averell Harriman, the freewheeling diplomat and Roosevelt's special envoy to Churchill and Stalin; Dean Acheson, the secretary of state who was more responsible for the Truman Doctrine than Truman and for the Marshall Plan than General Marshall; George Kennan, self-cast outsider and intellectual darling of the Washington elite; Robert Lovett, assistant secretary of war, undersecretary of state, and secretary of defense throughout the formative years of the Cold War; John McCloy, one of the nation's most influential private citizens; and Charles Bohlen, adroit diplomat and ambassador to the Soviet Union.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Exhaustive (exhausting), and fascinating July 30, 1999 33 out of 41 found this review helpful
This book is fantastically interesting. The detail and the descriptions of personalities involved make the subject matter more than palatable, even to the less scholarly among us. The book is, however, very, very long and would have perhaps been better broken up into several volumes. I would characterize it as very well written, exhaustively researched, slightly fawning and uncritical at times, and, in general, well worth lugging around.
another reader March 17, 2006 22 out of 28 found this review helpful
A very interesting book, but you have to be able to read between the lines. Isaacson paints a picture of six powerful men who did everything they could for US and mankind in general. Another reviewer used the words fawning and uncritical to describe the book. Well, there is a good reason for that. Walter Isaacson, head of Aspen Institute, is himself a member of the same "Insider Establishment" as the six men in the book. For kissing up, he has also been made a member of the powerful Council on Foreign Relations. This book should be combined with other more critical or even negative writings on the subject to help build a more realistic view. For example I recommend books by the late Anthony Sutton.
Averell Harriman was a particularly unsavoury character, a notorious Bilderberger, whose nefarious machinations are becoming more and more known to the public, even though still much is suppressed by the media.
Some people I have talked to think that the book should be called "the Wise Guys" instead of "the Wise Men" , but personally I wouldn't go that far. The world isn't just black and white after all. These guys looked after their own like everybody else on the planet and maybe, just maybe, in the meantime something good came out of it.
Wisdom Then January 17, 2007 14 out of 16 found this review helpful
In a 1996 interview with David Gergen on NPR, one of this book's central characters makes a case for, what I will hazard to suggest, is one of the authors' central views;
DAVID GERGEN: Let me ask you this in terms of thinking back over then of that period of American foreign policy in the last forty or fifty years, one of the ironies here is that in an age of information you suggest we have too little wisdom. GEORGE KENNAN: Yes, I do, and one of the things that bothers me about the computer culture of the present age is that one of the things of which it seems to me we have the least need is further information. What we really need is intelligent guidance in what to do with the information we've got.
Thus The Wise Men becomes a paean to, as the authors' admit at the outset, "the twentieth-century tradition of an informal brain trust of internationalists who first served Woodrow Wilson at Versailles and returned home to found the Council on Foreign Relations, " establishing along the way, "a distinguished network connecting Wall Street, Washington, worthy foundations, and proper clubs." The polemics about where one finds wisdom aside, The Wise Men provides a fascinating and uncompromising study of the evolution of U.S. foreign policy vis-a-vis the Soviet Union from the establishment of formal relations during the Roosevelt administration to Vietnam from the perspective of six of it's most significant players; Dean Acheson, Charles "Chip" Bohlen, Averell Harriman, George Kennan, Robert Lovett and John McCloy with side trips into electoral politics and the Middle East. Although I found the authors' fascination with many of these individuals' membership in Harvard's elite Porcellian and Yale's Skull and Bones clubs a bit off-putting (to say nothing of the not-so-veiled apologia for a certain social elitism . . . call me a populist), it would be difficult to find six more pivotal characters. The arguably lesser stars make significant appearances, most notably the Alsop and Bundy brothers, Clark Clifford, James Forrestal and Paul Nitze. I will even forgive the authors' treatment of one of my heroes', George Kennan's, emotional shortcomings. For those of a certain ideological bent, John Foster Dulles and Dean Rusk are not treated sympathetically. It all rings true notwithstanding and The Wise Men makes an excellent post-war study of U.S. foreign policy particularly as a counterpoint to David Halberstam's "Best and the Brightest" for those too busy or cheap to subscribe to Foreign Affairs.
A Reminder... July 10, 2008 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
... of a ten-year-old book that shouldn't be forgotten, the "biography" of American foreign policy from the Truman years to the apotheosis of Reagan. Like most biographies, this one concentrates on the childhood of the Cold War containment/exhaustion strategy, the DNA so to speak of neo-conservatism, born of a Democratic mother and a Republican father. Any reader of my other reviews, who doubts my assertion that Ronald Reagan and George Herbert Bush were mere inheritors of a foreign policy as rigidly sustained as if by primogeniture, should take on this book as ferociously as you dare.
The six Wise Men -- McCloy, Bohlen, Acheson, Lovett, Harriman, and Kennan -- would be the last to blush at being identified as "The Greatest Generation" or "The Best and the Brightest." Their egos and their sense of elite entitlement to lead are central to their story. This is a deeper portrait of their intellectual mode than either of those two just-mentioned best-sellers. Authors Isaacson and Thomas are clearly of the same "old school" as their subjects. Their admiration is in a sense self-adulation; even when the Wise Men acknowledged errors, the very nature of their errors turned out to reflect wisdom. My own admiration for the six is considerably more limited, but it's hard to deny the authors' thesis that these Yale and Harvard whiz-kids and their colleagues were the movers-and-shakers of administration after administration. Even as some of them lost a portion of their self-assurance in light of the massive failure in Vietnam, they continued to limn the hegemonist, exceptionalist conception of America which has continued to fail up to the current massive failure in Iraq. Given that all six were perceived as "liberals" aligned with Democratic administrations, some partisans of the other party may come to this book with an established antipathy toward its subjects. All I can say to that is "read it and learn!"
Will Change Your View of the World April 11, 2007 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
Not only kept me entertained, but completely changed my views on the post WWII era. A must read for anyone remotely interested in history or politics.
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