An edition of Jimmy Carter (1997)

Jimmy Carter

a comprehensive biography from Plains to postpresidency

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Last edited by Darby
February 18, 2017 | History
An edition of Jimmy Carter (1997)

Jimmy Carter

a comprehensive biography from Plains to postpresidency

  • 0 Ratings
  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

He is known as the Great Peace Maker, a man whose humanitarian ideals prompt his diplomatic intervention in places like Haiti, North Korea, Bosnia, the Middle East. Whether negotiating a cease-fire in shell-shocked Sarajevo or building houses for the homeless in Appalachia, Jimmy Carter can be found at the helm of a vast array of humanitarian efforts. An annual nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, he embodies the qualities that the American public mourns having lost in its politicians: integrity, honesty, ethics, and dedication. Yet Jimmy Carter, thirty-ninth president of the United States, is curiously apolitical. Despite his two diligent battles for the governorship of Georgia (he succeeded in 1970) and his "coup d'etat" election to the presidency in 1976, his was always less a political agenda than a moral one. He saw the office as a vehicle for constructive change, propelled by firm and very Christian convictions about right and wrong. To understand James Earl Carter, one must understand his upbringing, his faith, his unwavering beliefs. Peter Bourne traces Carter's dogma to its roots in Plains, Georgia, deep in the Baptist South, where the imbalanced society created by inherited wealth and segregation could not suppress the everyman farm worker who held dear the tenets of social justice and strove toward the highest goals. Tenacity and self-confidence would propel Carter from the Naval Academy to the Governorship to the presidency. Along the way, he remained devoted to Rosalynn and his family, to his religion, and to the ideology that the state and government have a responsibility to create a better society. As Bourne reveals, there would be no need for Carter to "reinvent" himself after public office. James Earl Carter went on to build houses for Habitat for Humanity; to create the Carter Presidential Center to focus on international conflict resolution, the Global 2000 program to reduce hunger and disease in Africa, and the Atlanta Project to address the most intractable inner city problems, all out of devotion to his life-long convictions. Jimmy Carter provides an insightful, intimate, and frank portrayal of the thirty-ninth president of the United States from a close friend and advisor of more than twenty-five years

Publish Date
Publisher
Scribner
Language
English
Pages
553

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Previews available in: English

Book Details


Published in

New York

Edition Notes

"A Lisa Drew book."

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
973.926/092, B
Library of Congress
E873 .B68 1997

The Physical Object

Pagination
553 p. :
Number of pages
553

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL22339703M
Internet Archive
jimmycartercompr00bour
ISBN 10
0684195437
LCCN
96048593
OCLC/WorldCat
35955194
Library Thing
266096
Goodreads
467043

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
February 18, 2017 Edited by Darby Edited without comment.
February 18, 2017 Edited by Darby Edited without comment.
February 18, 2017 Edited by Darby Added new cover
February 18, 2017 Edited by Darby Update covers
November 10, 2008 Created by ImportBot Imported from Talis MARC record.