The observer; the independent; the guardian.

AuthorSchorr, Daniel
PositionLetter from America 1946-2004 - Book Review

Letter from America 1946-2004

By Alistair Cooke

Alfred A. Knopf, $35.00

"The second Bush fairy tale," Alistair Cooke called it. Propped up in bed on Feb. 20, 2004, six weeks before his death, Cooke wrote the last of 58 years worth of weekly "Letter[s] from America" for the BBC that brought alive his adopted homeland for the country of his birth. In this final essay, he recalled the first Gulf War, so "briskly fought" by President George H.W. Bush, the "heroic warrior-king." But, thereupon seeking reelection, Bush was "handsomely defeated by a nationally unknown former Governor of Arkansas, a Southern state which had never before been the cradle of a President." President Clinton was undone by his affair with Monica Lewinsky, "a figure of fate as significant as Napoleon's mistress Madame Walewska." And by the time it was his turn to deal with a menacing Iraq, Clinton "didn't possess the moral authority to invade Long Island."

Then came "the second Bush fairy tale." The young Bush won a "swift and picturesque victory" over Saddam Hussein, only to run into the "unexpected weight and range and murderous force" of Iraqi opposition. The testimony of Chief Weapons Inspector David Kay--"We got it all wrong"--had the effect of driving "a stake in the heart of the administration's main declared reason for going into Iraq."

And now, nine months before the election, Cooke observed Sen. John Kerry's (D-Mass.) "odd and lonely boast" that Bush would be driven from the White House, and "I'm the man to do it." Perhaps the essayist, with his sense of America, thought that Kerry would really win. But, artfully, he hedged his bets and avoided a prediction.

These fragmentary quotations can only begin to convey the style with which this informed and scholarly journalist reduced complicated events into prose understandable across the ocean. You will gather that I am, and have long been, an Alistair Cooke enthusiast. Full disclosure requires me to note that we were of the same generation (he was born in 1908, eight years before me). We shared a love for radio, the most intimate form of communication. And as a foreign correspondent during much of my career, I appreciate the challenge of making a foreign country understandable to an audience back home.

As has been said of Edward R. Murrow, Alistair Cooke was made for radio and radio for him. Leafing through this treasure trove of essays on a wide variety of aspects of American life, I could almost hear the measured...

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