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Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Champion Of Freedom

Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Champion Of Freedom
By Conrad Black

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Franklin Delano Roosevelt stands astride American history like a colossus, having pulled the nation out of the Great Depression and led it to victory in the Second World War. Elected to four terms as president, he transformed an inward-looking country into the greatest superpower the world had ever known. Only Abraham Lincoln did more to save America from destruction. But FDR is such a large figure that historians tend to take him as part of the landscape, focusing on smaller aspects of his achievements or carping about where he ought to have done things differently. Few have tried to assess the totality of FDR's life and career.

Conrad Black rises to the challenge. In this magisterial biography, Black makes the case that FDR was the most important person of the twentieth century, transforming his nation and the world through his unparalleled skill as a domestic politician, war leader, strategist, and global visionary--all of which he accomplished despite a physical infirmity that could easily have ended his public life at age thirty-nine. Black also takes on the great critics of FDR, especially those who accuse him of betraying the West at Yalta. Black opens a new chapter in our understanding of this great man, whose example is even more inspiring as a new generation embarks on its own rendezvous with destiny.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #91646 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-03-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 1328 pages

Editorial Reviews

Books in Canada
As unlikely as it would seem today, there was a time when an energetic American, bent on global domination, could be heralded by French and British intellectuals as a “god”. This was in the late 40s, early 50s, and the American was Orson Welles. No less a critic than Kenneth Tynan called Citizen Kane, “the biggest cultural event of my early life.” Cocteau and the French New Wave directors lionized him. Orson Welles is a myth that keeps on growing, not least in terms of the biography industry. Peter Conrad’s new book follows on the heels of several other critically-acclaimed studies. At a time when younger filmgoers might think the best heavyset American liberal filmmaker is Michael Moore, it is useful to be reminded that Welles-who seriously entertained the thought of running for the Senate, on a Democratic ticket-was there first.
Welles holds a sort of patent on the early innovative days of three of the major art forms of the 20th century: theatre, radio, and cinema, as each began to intersect with technology. Before his 20th birthday, Welles revolutionized Broadway with his “All-Black” Macbeth, out-Brechting Brecht; his War of the Worlds broadcast redefined the benevolence of the disembodied voice, introducing its “shadow side”, as did his Shadow radio-plays; and, in 1941, while still a very young man, he redirected Hollywood with the frenetic all-purpose vaudeville of Citizen Kane (voted Best Film by leading critics for its fifth decade in a recent Sight and Sound poll).
And, in the role of Harry Lime (in The Third Man) for which he wrote the unforgettable dialogue about Cuckoo clocks and mass-murder, Welles became the gritty post-war icon, serenaded by the film’s catchy zither music whenever (which was often) he entered a restaurant or night club. Yet, after all these triumphs, in 1985, he died a pariah of the industries he momentarily diverted and redefined, infamous mainly for a series of tacky wine ads and rotund, otiose appearances on television.
This decline and fall of the Orson Empire is a powerful story. It is made doubly so by combining the best elements of comedy, and tragedy: Was Welles the self-wasting, over-indulging Falstaff, or the sinned-against Lear, an exile from the very media kingdoms he had helped make great? Like the shattered (body) doubles in the fun-house mirror at the end of The Lady From Shanghai, either figure seems a potential simulacrum of the auteur’s own broken vision, and ultimate destiny.
It is no surprise that Conrad, a professor of English at Oxford for thirty years, should be drawn to presenting a version of the myriad “stories” of Welles’s fragmented life, in terms of a number of literary and mythic personae (Peter Pan, Faust, Mercury, Kurtz, and so on). One is tempted to view this long, non-sequential (if not inconsequential) book as a sort of theatrical review, the kind with which Welles toured bombed-out post-war Germany: “Behold, the man and his many masks!”
Welles is tailor-made for this sort of outsized treatment (as if a normal narrative was not enough space), for, as Conrad repeatedly reminds us, Welles “like Whitman”-another enthusiastic mid-Westerner with universal, even megalomaniacal claims-contained multitudes. Welles, like some kind of permanent Sandwich Board Man, was himself the advertisement for the incredible multiplicity a human career can become. Jean-Luc Godard recalls one show where Welles introduced himself with the flamboyance of a trick just done as “author, composer, actor, designer, producer, director, scholar, financier, gourmet, ventriloquist, poet.” So, it seems appropriate that Conrad should read the text of Welles’s (self) obsessions, self-descriptions, films, and failed projects as a kind of Ur-pastiche waiting for its ideal reader.
In fact, Conrad’s decision to take Welles at his word, and present 15 chapters (plus Preface and Introduction) as 15 Types of Orson is grandiose, tedious, and at times spectacularly fascinating, if only for a few paragraphs. Sometimes, when the semiotic links go haywire (the Martian broadcast, also known as “the panic broadcast” linked to Pan, the frenetic god, linked to Peter Pan, and so on), the resulting Marx Bros. zaniness achieves the giddy heights of Welles’s directing style. The analysis of Kane’s use of Coleridge’s poem (“In Xanadu did Kubla Khan…”), revealing Welles’s purposeful inversion of the original fire-ice imagery, is original and convincing.
Too often Conrad indulges in sheer erudition, as when we are informed, for instance, that Orson’s name “comes from a late-medieval French romance” about a kidnapped young prince. To then be told how this relates Welles to the character of Orsini (“giving him a personal stake in the Renaissance”)… well, Welles is already complex enough, without needing to be po-mo’d to death.
The fault of Conrad’s book is ultimately in the structure, which is likely meant to pay homage to the ground-breaking fragmented narrative that was Kane’s unique double-helix. Conrad describes Kane’s newspapers-and by extension Welles-by saying “divergent stories jostle in the same space, rather than being sorted into a temporal sequence as traditional narrative ordained. Incoherence… was a modernist virtue.” Incoherence, however, is hardly the ideal form for what is, basically, a biography.
Conrad’s decision to circle, return and repeat from many perspectives begets repetitiveness and becomes dull, which is hardly an acceptable form of homage. Welles was never dull or repetitive. His films and other projects are precursors of the roller-coaster ride we now think of as “event movies”. Welles’s life was, until its last years, as exciting as possible, representing the very modern image of the American as living madcap progress (his choice of Mercury as name of his Theatre Company suggests both the mercurial, and the immediate, aspects of this god), as Eugene Morgan in Ambersons does. So, it is hard to comprehend why Conrad has devised a series of air-tight chambers, like some weird box in one of Welles’s magic shows, in which to saw his subject’s life in half after half after half.
Conrad wilfully dispenses with a filmography in his book, requiring that every reference to a film gets the same explanation (The Trial, we are told in several places, is “based on the work by Kafka”) again and again. And elements in Welles’s life are, chapter by chapter, looked at from different angles, which is surely the point; but they are not illuminated in such uniquely altered circumstances as to reflect the refreshing perspective that Welles’s cinematographers often achieved in his own masterworks.
It is odd how some of the most compelling “stories” get left out. Some of his marriages, and affairs, to remarkable, talented and beautiful women (such as Rita Hayworth) barely get a look-in; and his fraught homo-erotic creative partnership with John Houseman is almost all on the cutting room floor. There are, then, other books on Welles which all but the die-hard fan might want to read first. Rosebud, by David Thomson, and The Road to Xanadu, by Simon Callow, are both better at recreating the mystery, thrill and mayhem of working with Welles, or in his shadow. They do this with a beginning-middle-end narrative (for the most part) which, though it may seem less textually daring, may be more appropriate for a meteoric career: the reader gets to be dazzled, then depressed, as Welles was himself.
Still, Conrad has achieved something evocative and strange in his study: the picture of Orson Welles as major, even central, cultural, and literary figure of the 20th century, the American Picasso (if Picasso’s paint had to be paid for by movie executives). He does this in two ways, which would have pleased Welles no end: by reminding us, anecdotally, of the inspiring cultural ubiquity of Welles during his heyday (30s-50s); and by embedding the gargantuan “hyphenate” (actor-director-writer-etcetera) in the Western literary canon (as apologist for, and adaptor of). We may, for instance, be surprised to learn that he co-edited a definitive series of Shakespeare’s plays, for high school students; that in 1942, Welles went to Brazil to film a propaganda picture, was given the honorary title of Brigadier General by the US government; gambled with Churchill in Venice; or bickered with Hemingway over how to read a radio report on war.
We also learn that producer Alexander Korda had initiated a project of War and Peace, with Eisenstein to direct, Welles to star, and both to co-write the script-this collapsing under the weight of Welles’s ego, as he demanded to co-direct as well. Conrad investigates his Heart of Darkness script, never filmed, but always influential in his later works. Conrad also tells us of Welles’s aborted plan to book-end Western civilization by filming Homer’s The Odyssey, and Joyce’s Ulysses. Then there is the Quixote picture.
It is indicative of the legendary nature of such can-do genius, that one’s heart instantly sinks at the news of these scuttled films, which if completed, would surely have been some of the finest cultural products of the last century. Indeed, Welles is perhaps unique among great artists for being as well-loved for the work undone, as done (and sometimes undone by others, as in the Touch of Evil fiasco). When Conrad relates the story of Welles weeping in a hotel room in 1972, after watching the cruelly-edited studio version of The Magnificent Ambersons, thirty years after the butchery, it is hard not to cry with him.
Todd Swift (Books in Canada)

From Publishers Weekly
Flying over the Nile near Cairo in October 1943, President Roosevelt looked down and quipped, "Ah, my friend the Sphinx." Sometimes portrayed that way by cartoonists in his time, he is utterly unsphinxlike in Lord Black's new biography. Massive and moving, barbed yet balanced, it is scrupulously objective and coldly unsparing of agenda-ridden earlier biographers and historians. It leaps to the head of the class of Rooseveltian lives and will be difficult to supersede. To Black, the Canadian-born media mogul (he owns the London Daily Telegraph and the Chicago Sun-Times, among other papers worldwide), the second Roosevelt was, apart from Lincoln perhaps as savior of the Union, the greatest American president, and with no exceptions the greatest of its politicians. No FDR-haters have exposed, credibly, more of Roosevelt's "less admirable tendencies," from "naked opportunism," "deformed idealism" and "pious trumpery" to "insatiable vindictiveness." Yet the four-term president emerges in Black's compelling life as personifying vividly the civilization he, more than any other contemporary, rescued from demoralizing economic depression and devastating world war. His larger-than-life Roosevelt possesses consummate sensitivity and tactical skill, radiating power and panache despite a physical vulnerability from the polio that left him without the use of his legs at 39. "His insight into common men," Black writes, "was the more remarkable because he was certainly not one of them, and never pretended for an instant that he was." By comparison, Black claims, most associates and rivals seemed like kindergarten children, yet some exceptions are fleshed out memorably, notably Roosevelt's selfless political intimates Louis McHenry Howe and Harry Hopkins, and his vigorous presidential competitor in 1940, the surprising Wendell Willkie. (Roosevelt's wife, Eleanor, comes off as both harridan and heroine.) Barring occasional lapses into English locutions like "Boxing Day" and "Remembrance Day"(the days after Christmas and Armistice Day), or "drinking his own bathwater," Conrad's style is lucid and engaging, witty and acerbic, with lines that cry out to be quoted or read aloud, as when he scorns an attack on the devotion of Roosevelt's daughter, Anna, with "Filial concern does not make the President a vegetable or his daughter a Lady Macbeth." A few minor historical errors deserve correction in what will assuredly be further printings, and the later sections appear to be composed in undue haste, but the sweeping and persuasive impact of this possibly off-puttingly big book makes it not only the best one-volume life of the 32nd president but the best at any length, bound to be widely read and discussed. 32 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Black is the CEO of newspaper publishing giant Hollinger International, Inc. He has written a massive, comprehensive, but frequently ponderous biography of the great FDR. Unfortunately, Black spends an inordinate amount of time describing Roosevelt's personal life, often in mind-numbing detail. Does the fact that a young Franklin tried to conceal an accidental gash to his forehead really help to understand the man? Yet this work has great value, particularly when it focuses upon Roosevelt as president and indomitable wartime leader. In Black's view, Roosevelt, like Churchill, understood that the war was more than a mere struggle between nation states. He believed passionately, and correctly, that it was a struggle to preserve the ideals of liberty and democracy that had been nurtured and developed over centuries. It was that belief that sustained Roosevelt, and it was his skill and courage as a leader that allowed him to bring his people to that realization. Despite its flaws, Black's chronicle of a man of strength and vision is a worthy tribute to his legacy. Jay Freeman
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