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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 6
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- Love him or hate him, Richard Nixon is hard to ignore. Since
- his resignation in 1974, Nixon has re-emerged as an outspoken
- thinker on American politics and a respected analyst of foreign
- policy. His forthcoming book, In the Arena, excerpted this week
- in TIME, is his most emotionally fired memoir to date and his
- most exculpatory. Beginning with his flight from the White
- House, he recounts his moments of despair and his struggle to
- redeem himself.
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- Nixon, who describes as one of his strengths the "iron butt"
- necessary for long hours of scholarship, had done all his
- homework when he met last week for two interviews in his office
- in Woodcliff Lake, N.J., with TIME chief of correspondents John
- F. Stacks and editor at large Strobe Talbott. "What is striking
- is that he regards these interviews as serious works and
- prepares for them," says Talbott. "He works out his talking
- points in a detailed fashion. He has a definite agenda."
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- Nixon prefers to steer the conversation toward foreign,
- rather than domestic, policy, and his office reflects his
- passion for international affairs. His work space is decorated
- with photographs from his travels abroad and gifts bestowed by
- world leaders on him and his family after he left office. Since
- then, Stacks has interviewed Nixon two times, Talbott four.
- With each encounter, they have discovered a man in close touch
- with the political scene. "He sees the world as a kind of
- interlocking device," says Stacks. "He is fully back on his
- game." At 77, Nixon is also in good health and, says Talbott,
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- Why provide a platform for an ex-President who is plainly
- on a quest for historical redemption? "That Nixon chooses to
- stay in the arena makes him an important historical figure,"
- says Stacks. "He brings experience and expertise to bear on the
- public discussion." Nixon also provides a long-range view on
- a world that is changing at a startling pace. "The thing that's
- endlessly intriguing about Nixon is that he dominates and
- personifies American politics for three decades, both its best
- and its worst parts," says Stacks. "His own progression mirrors
- the country's, from a virulent anti-Communist to being the
- author of detente to now being an observer of Gorbachev's
- reforms."
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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