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- BOOKS, Page 76A Regular Guy
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- RICHARD NIXON AND HIS AMERICA by Herbert S. Parmet Little,
- Brown; 755 pages; $24.95
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- Making Richard Nixon seem ordinary is no easy task, but
- Herbert Parmet almost pulls it off. A respected historian, he
- spent six years burrowing into various archives and interviewing
- just about every living soul who has encountered the 37th
- President -- as well as the man himself, a feat few Nixon
- biographers can match. Unfortunately, it yielded no major
- scoops.
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- Parmet's Nixon is not the driven, tortured, fascinating
- schemer of popular memory or Watergate fame. In fact, that
- career-ending scandal merits only six pages at the book's close.
- Instead, Parmet paints Nixon as a regular guy, a mediator
- between the forces of welfare statism and cold war red bashing.
- Every rap against the former President -- from his 1952 slush
- fund to the 1972 Christmas bombing of North Viet Nam -- is
- thoroughly ventilated and, in most cases, dismissed. Nixon, says
- Parmet, was merely a child of his times, who "harnessed the
- unease that lay just below the surface of celebratory blessings
- of the American existence." Nixon is more interesting than
- that. He deepened the unease, and in the end paid heavily for
- it.
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