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| America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom (America: the Last Best Hope) | 
enlarge | Author: William J. Bennett Publisher: Thomas Nelson Category: Book
List Price: $16.99 Buy New: $9.71 You Save: $7.28 (43%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 33068
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 592 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.3 x 1.6
ISBN: 1595550879 Dewey Decimal Number: 973 EAN: 9781595550873 ASIN: 1595550879
Publication Date: April 8, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Respected scholar William Bennett reacquaints America with its heritage in the second volume of America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II). This engaging narrative slices through the cobwebs of time, memory, and prevailing cynicism to reinvigorate America with an informed patriotism.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 26 more reviews...
A very good general history for the student and reader interested in a positive view of America May 4, 2007 44 out of 45 found this review helpful
This is the second volume of William J. Bennett's history of America. It is written for the general reader or student who is interested in reading the history of our country from an unabashedly supportive point of view. Bennett judges events, good and bad, from a moral point of view that would be recognizable to anyone aware of traditional religious teaching, that is before the moral relativism of the mid-twentieth century took hold of historical writing.
Bennett picks up the narrative from the first volume with World War I and takes us through the end of Ronald Reagan's presidency and the end of the Soviet Union and the Cold War. He offers an epilogue explaining why he ended the volume there and talks briefly about his view of America and our current situation in the world, including the current war.
As one can tell from the title of these works, Bennett does believe in American Exceptionalism and that, despite its failings, we are a moral country that is seeking to do right and to improve. For this reason, this can be a refreshing read for anyone who believes in traditional morality, admires American, and yet desires a readable and honest history that doesn't shy away from our mistakes and failings. The focus is always on history being made and lived by real people rather than some abstract forces. Bennett is also clear about the various political perspectives of the various historical actors and commentators. This helps the reader keep straight how various schools of political thought have affected the course of history in our country and around the world.
I can imagine that any number of students who are home schooled would use both volumes of these texts to study American history. While this isn't the only such option available, it is easy to read and tells stories about our history that one doesn't find in many other places. He doesn't shy away from the role of religion in our nation's public life, which I enjoyed a great deal. This current obsession of sanitizing the public square of religious expression is a recent innovation and a mistake. It also distorts our history so greatly as to be dishonest about the contributions of religion and its huge role in the fabric of our nation's history.
Another very refreshing inclusion is the role of conservative thought and not treating it as the source of all malevolence or as an aberration that must be gotten rid of as soon as possible. One can even read about Ronald Reagan, William Buckley, Milton Friedman, and others without all kinds of qualifiers, personal attacks, and scare quotes.
Is the book perfect? Of course not. No history can be. I do wish there were more pictures and that those supplied were printed in better quality. However, in the age of the Internet, a student can go find any number of images on any topic he or she chooses. So, this is not a big problem.
A great addition to volume 1... May 3, 2007 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
William Bennett's America: The Last Best Hope, Vol. II is a wonderful conclusion to the work he began in volumer I. Full bodied, well written and honest in its breadth, Volume 2 is the history that most Americans would be proud of. I also agree with the other reviewer that both volume I and II would make a terrific course of study for home schooled children. I would go one step further in stating that it should be required reading on every high school and perhaps college campus in the country, not because it cries out our successes and glosses over our mistakes. Infact, the book does make much of our successes in the 20th century. Bennett does an excellent job in discussing our role in two world war victories. He explains our unsurpassed economic growth and our continued dominance in the world market. He includes our movement in making sure that all are given the opportunity to share in the country's richness. But Bennett also includes our failures and this is what makes the book so great.
My favorite topics of this book are Chapters 1 (America and the Great War (1914-1921)), Chapter 2 (The Boom and the Bust (1921-1933)), Chapter 4 (America's Rendezvous with Destiny (1939-1941)), and those sections dealing with the Reagan years. Bennett is not embarrassed over his devotion to Ronald Reagan and this is clear in the book.
I highly recommend Volume 2.
A superb history of the United States of America August 23, 2007 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
The first volume of "America: The Last Best Hope" is, in my opinion, the finest contemporary history of the United States yet written. It is an honest telling of the nation's history, warts and all, a far cry than the America hating nonsense that is unfortunately being taught to our children.
The second volume isn't as good. Still superior to anything else on the subject I've read, but I felt that there should have been two volumes, not one. The first covering 1914 to about 1945 and the second from roughly 1945 through the Reagan years.
Why? Because I felt that Dr. Bennett had crammed too much into this single volume and, as a result, been forced to omit illuminating detail. More time and space, for example, should have been spent on examining how Democrats in Congress perpetuated racial discrimination for almost a century and fought demonically until the last to prevent passage of the Civil Rights Act.
Instead, many historically significant episodes are reduced to a few sentences. Still illuminating, but leaving the already knowledgeable reader panting for more. Dr. Bennett and, I presume, his research team have been more than diligent in teasing obscure sources out of the archives and provide new information even to someone like me who has been an avid consumer of American histories for more than five decades.
The book is not perfect. There are small, but disturbing errors, such as the misspelling of Messerschmitt, a WWII German aircraft manufacturer.
On the whole though, this remains a marvelous history of America, faults and all. It would make a wonderful gift, I think, for any intelligent high-school or older student from a giver who wants the recipient to know just how fortunate they are to live in this magnificient nation.
Jerry
Good Start, Bad Ending November 16, 2007 8 out of 22 found this review helpful
I thought the first volume was very objective and unbiased in its text. The second volume had the same treatment up to modern times. During the Nixon tenure and from that point on, the author stopped being objective with political issues. Instead, his opinions and political views took over. On abortion, the author states that Roe Vs. Wade was a blunder on the Supreme Court and was an immoral ruling. On the anti-war protesters during Vietnam, he chastises Jane Fonda and in general all war protesters. He paints them as hypocritical as the cried out about Nixon's Xmas bombing campaign as brutal and inhumane but "remained silent" on the North Vietnamese's Tet offensive on Xmas several years earlier. His tone remains toward the Democrats and the liberals as the defeatists during the Vietnam War and how their "ending" of this war was a mistake. And from the Nixon era on through Regan, Bennett takes jabs at the people he calls "liberals" and faults them for the troubles of the time. Mr. Bennett is celebratory of civil rights and woman's suffrage (with the exception of the feminist movement for reproductive freedom) coming to fruition in this volume (rightfully so) but he somehow weaves the gay rights movement starting at the Stonewall Inn as the decline of moral society with the hippies. There are times the author refers to gay men as "homosexuals". It's done in a condemning way. After all, who calls a gay or lesbian a homosexual these days? Right - in times of condescension.
The author, as we know, was Reagan's education czar. The author, as the reader will find out, has much love (too much in my opinion) for Reagan. So much, that Regan's failures are blindly overlooked. I focus on Reagan because the author does such with high esteem. He stops objectively reporting and injects more of the author's personal view. I do remind Mr. Bennett that there are those of us who did not view Reagan with high esteem at all. He allowed the AIDS epidemic to flourish for nearly 5 years before he acknowledged it simply because it was associated with gay men (or "homosexuals" as he'd say). Bennett however, defends this! His trickle down economics depending on who you talk to wasn't a good economic policy especially to those who were hurt in the GHW Bush year recession. The tremendous deficit and its impact is overlooked! Little is said about the incredible interested rates and deficit racked up by Reagan. And Reagan certainly does not deserve all the credit for staring down and ending communism in Russia. That was decades of work starting with Truman in the 1940's. That as we know now was also a system that could not survive in the long run no matter how much Reagan out spent the USSR in defense. And just about any president who can speak of optimism and pride in the US could have looked wonderful compared to Carter (arguable one of the worst president). So pages and pages of hearing how Reagan propped this country back up is really subjective on the author's part. Yes, did some good such as ending price fixing but it wasn't and earth shattering conclusion to draw at the time that price fixing was bad.
I thought the first of the book was outstanding. The last (1960's and on) were nothing but a right wing, staunch conservative's spin on things. For that, the ending left a bad taste in my mouth about this book and somewhat regretfully. I expected a history book which it started out as, but turned to spin by the end. I'd still recommend this book but advise to take the ending with a grain of salt. It's a shame because 90% of this work was A+.
I also should mention this is one of the few books I have seen numerous spelling and grammatical errors. He also overuses italics on everything.
A good, readable U.S. history book May 17, 2007 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This book is a perfect follow up to the first volume. Bennett continues his readable writing style. Even those that marginally like history should find the book enjoyable to read.
While the first volume covers over four centuries, this second volume covers about three quarters of a century. With 533 pages of reading material and 41 pages of bibliography, it is still necessary to drastically limit scope. This is perhaps the most difficult task for a history writer. It necessarily means that some issues are touched upon only lightly.
Bennett's sense of what to include lends to the book's readability as much as does his writing style. He cleverly weaves in human interest stories that help draw the reader in. These vignettes demonstrate America's strengths and weaknesses, but overall they provide an optimistic view of the U.S.
Another device Bennett uses for limiting scope is to largely frame the book around national politics, and particularly around presidential administrations. This is highly useful in providing insight into the kind of people Americans have elected to govern them, which provides a glimpse into the thinking and experiences of Americans at regular historical intervals. But this device also tends to lightly treat some important issues that are not well addressed in national politics.
Bennett's personal feelings regarding historical figures was evident in the first volume, but it seems to me that this shines through much more clearly in the second volume. Perhaps this is because Bennett personally experienced many of the later events and has even had dealings with some of the people he discusses.
For example, Bennett's respect for Eisenhower and Kennedy are apparent, as is his undisguised disgust with Johnson and Nixon. Nowhere is Bennett's loathing more apparent than in his treatment of the withdrawal of American support from Southeast Asia in the mid 70s that resulted in the deaths of over two million human beings.
One of the highlights of the book is Bennett's handling of World War II. I felt a palpable sense of what average Americans in the pre-war years were experiencing as the free world hurtled toward a showdown with fascism and militarism. Not only did I feel a sense of how average Americans experienced the war, but I gained fresh insights into the personalities and interconnections of the movers and shakers in the war.
More than anything else, this book helps explain the whys behind historical events. And it does so in a pleasantly readable way. I assume that some history professionals would dismiss Bennett's book as lacking some of the elements they have come to expect in scholarly offerings. Bennett, himself a professor of history, says that most such history tomes are dry and deplorable. He argues that few Americans understand history because few good and readable history texts are available. With this book and its predecessor volume, Bennett does a good job of making sure that at least some factual, readable, and optimistic American history books are available.
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