The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: The Life and Times of Washington's Most Private First Lady

The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: The Life and Times of Washington's Most Private First Lady

by Heath Hardage Lee

Narrated by Jane Oppenheimer

Unabridged — 14 hours, 7 minutes

The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: The Life and Times of Washington's Most Private First Lady

The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: The Life and Times of Washington's Most Private First Lady

by Heath Hardage Lee

Narrated by Jane Oppenheimer

Unabridged — 14 hours, 7 minutes

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Overview

A new, revolutionary look into the brilliant life of Pat Nixon.

In America's collective consciousness, Pat Nixon has long been perceived as enigmatic. She was voted “Most Admired Woman in the World” in 1972 and made Gallup Poll's top ten list of most admired women fourteen times. She survived the turmoil of the Watergate scandal with her popularity and dignity intact. The real Pat Nixon, however, bore little resemblance to the woman so often described as elusive, mysterious and “plastic” in the press. Pat married Richard Nixon in June of 1940. As the couple rose to prominence, Pat became Second Lady from 1953-1961 and then First Lady from 1969-1974, forging her own graceful path between the protocols of the strait-laced mid-century and the bra-burning Sixties and Seventies.

Pat was a highly travelled First Lady, visiting eighty-three countries during her tenure. After a devastating earthquake in Peru in 1970, she personally flew in medical supplies and food to hard-hit areas, meeting one-on-one with victims of the tragedy. The First Lady's 1972 trips with her husband to China and to Russia were critical to the detente that resulted. Back in the US, Pat greatly expanded upon previous preservation efforts in the White House, obtaining more art and antique objects than any other First Lady. In the domestic arena, she was progressive on women's issues, favoring the Equal Rights Amendment and backing a targeted effort to get more women into high level government jobs. Pat strongly supported nominating a woman for the Supreme Court. She was pro-choice, supporting women's reproductive rights publicly even before the landmark Roe v. Wade case in 1973.

When asked to define her “signature” First Lady agenda, she defied being put into a box, often saying: “People are my project.” The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon, Heath Hardage Lee presents listeners with the essential nature of this First Lady, an empathetic, adventurous, self-made woman who wanted no power or influence, but who connected warmly with both ordinary Americans and people from different cultures she encountered world-wide.

A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin's Press.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

06/24/2024

Biographer Lee (The League of Wives) paints an intriguingly sympathetic portrait of first lady Pat Nixon (1912–1993), framing her as an unfairly maligned figure (she was famously nicknamed “Plastic Pat” for her apparent aloofness) who deserves credit for having “moved the needle substantially forward for women’s issues.” It was during Nixon’s stint as second lady that the press first tagged her as “too perfect” (she had “a doll’s terrifying poise,” according to one journalist). Though such perceptions were “partially a problem of Pat’s making” because of her reticence with the press, Lee argues that Nixon was still greatly misinterpreted and contends that “cold and calculating” presidential aide H.R. Haldeman worked insidiously to build her negative reputation. Haldeman, incensed by Nixon’s pro-woman political agenda (including her support for abortion rights), attempted to isolate the first lady politically and socially; he covertly took over East Wing operations with his own aides, advised others not to socialize with her, and packaged her for the media “like a 1960s Barbie doll.” Lee’s fine-grained biography, though elegantly written, really only pops when the villainous Haldeman enters the scene (“One former staff person claims Haldeman told them directly that the president should... put in a mental institution”). Still, readers in search of a new perspective on the Watergate era will find it here. (Aug.)

From the Publisher

“The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon is a marvelous biography—a deeply reported, illuminating story of love, ambition, and influence. With vivid detail based on new sources, Heath Hardage Lee brings to life a complex and memorable figure in a book that never fails to fascinate.” — Jonathan Eig, New York Times bestselling author of King: A Life and Ali: A Life

"Everything I thought I knew about Pat Nixon was upended by reading Heath Hardage Lee’s astonishing new biography. Beautiful, steely, and charismatic, Pat Nixon was, in Henry Kissinger’s words, a woman ‘totally without illusions,’ who cloaked her extraordinary ambition in the guise of ‘The Nation’s Ideal Housewife.’ The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon convinced me that the tragedy of Watergate could have been avoided entirely had Dick Nixon followed the path of his remarkable First Lady." – Debby Applegate, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Madam: The Biography of Polly Adler, Icon of the Jazz Age

“For this reader, Pat Nixon came to life in surprising ways in The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon. She was smarter than people knew, funnier than people expected and stronger than people gave her credit for. She was also a successful diplomat for her husband and contributed to his political success including her advancing of his commitment to civil rights – all documented here for the first time. As Dick later said of Pat, “She deserved so much more.” That she did... and she gets it here.” – J Randy Taraborelli, New York Times bestselling author of Jackie: Public, Private, Secret

"I first met Pat Nixon in October 1952 when I was six years old. Over the following two-plus decades, she became one of the most admired women in the country. Yet, somehow, Americans never seemed to come to really know her. In The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon, Heath Lee reveals Pat Nixon to be a strong, complex, intensely human woman whose life deserves to be appreciated in full. Mrs. Nixon is a mystery no more.” – Christine Todd Whitman, 50th Governor of New Jersey and best-selling author of It’s My Party Too

"The personification of the postwar ideal of the self-effacing homemaker, Pat Nixon was an intensely private person, in a painfully public role, at a time when America's role and a woman's role were both subjects of bitter debate. To relive that era of turmoil from the First Lady's anguished vantage point in Heath Lee’s thoroughly researched and elegantly written biography is unexpectedly enthralling. As her husband, Richard Nixon, put it, 'She also ran.'" – Niall Ferguson, Milbank Family Senior Fellow, the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and author of Kissinger, 1923-1968: The Idealist.

"Drawing on her extensive interviews with family, former White House staff, longtime friends, and historians, Lee offers a clarifying portrait of this elusive and enigmatic woman." — Booklist

“…an intriguingly sympathetic portrait of first lady Pat Nixon…readers in search of a new perspective on the Watergate era will find it here.” — Publisher's Weekly

Library Journal

07/01/2024

Award-winning historian/biographer/curator Lee (The League of Wives: The Untold Story of the Women Who Took on the U.S. Government To Bring Their Husbands Home) offers an eye-opening view of Pat Nixon. Readers may have thought she consistently stood by her husband, former president Richard Nixon, through numerous campaigns, their years in the White House, and throughout Watergate. But Lee portrays her as an independent woman, born in 1912 in Ely, NV, a mining town, where her family experienced hardships during the Great Depression. They eventually left mining behind and moved to a small truck farm in California, near Los Angeles. Her mother died when she was 13; her father passed away when she was 18. This well-written book provides many fascinating details about her efforts to be independent and take care of herself; she worked as a teacher and paid for her college tuition. Later, she quietly supported women's right to choose, pushed for more women to fill high-ranking government positions, and expressed that she hoped to see a woman on the U.S. Supreme Court. The book does not give any insight into what Pat Nixon thought of her husband's actions. VERDICT An enjoyable, detailed biography about a first lady perceived to be highly mysterious and private.—Amy Lewontin

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159557629
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 08/06/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
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