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Paperback Madam Secretary: A Memoir Book

ISBN: 1401359620

ISBN13: 9781401359621

Madam Secretary: A Memoir

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Book Overview

"One of the most diverting political bios in recent memory." -- Entertainment WeeklyRevised and updated with a new epilogue, Madam Secretary is the moving and inspiring memoir of one of the most... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

from a leisure reader

I wish I hadn't put off reading this book. I never imagined I would enjoy it so much. I would have never thought a political novel would keep me anxious for every page, but hers did. I enjoyed the mix of serious commentary and humor. Although it seems that she could have written more in some places it does seem candid overall. Albright's writing style is very comfortable. She sticks to the point and presents her thoughts clearly. I felt as if I was being told stories by my own grandmother. I have a newfound respect for Albright as a role-model for todays young women. I especially enjoyed her personal accounts of the "non-public" side of several world leaders. I see some reviewers complain that this book didn't have enough hard hitting politics, but it does say it is a "memoir." I wasn't looking for policy choices or political analysis, I was looking for history from the point of view of one woman on the inside, and I found just that.

Exemplary

Madam Secretary is a wonderful capsule of a remarkable life and highly recommended for anyone who is as much of a current affairs geek as I am. While most will be drawn to read this book because of the insights Ms. Albright provides into the Clinton Administration's roles in the Middle East conflict, Kosovo, and North Korea - all of which are discussed in fascinating detail - some of the most compelling (and poignant) sections of the book have to do with her pain associated with the sudden dissolution of her marriage, the discovery of her Jewish ancestry, and her life in Czechoslovakia as a young girl.Ms. Albright's narrative voice is warm and inviting and utterly without pretension. This is my vote for the best non-fiction book of 2003.

The best autobiography I've read!

I didn't want it to end. What a wonderful, delightful, insightful book Madeleine has written. To read this book is to walk in her shoes, and to know what it is like to not only care deeply and passionately about foreign affairs and far away countries, but what a single individual along with a motivated team (she could never forget her team) can accomplish in a poultry 4 years, to change the course of history and the lives of women, men and children we may never met. Thanks Madam Secretary! A reader From The Front Range of Colorado and the High Desert of Phoenix.

The candid memoirs of the first woman Secretary of State

"Madam Secretary" presents the memoirs of Madeleine Albright, the highest ranking woman in the history of U.S. government (despite what conclusions you might have reached about some of the First Ladies, Edith Galt Wilson in particular). During the eight years of the Clinton administration Albright served as U.N. ambassador and then, following the resignation of Warren Christopher, as Secretary of State. Half of "Madam Secretary" is devoted to that period of her life, while the rest tells the story of how a refugee from Czechoslovakia eventually became the first woman Secretary of State in American history and one of the most admired public figures of recent years (she was confirmed 99-0 by the Senate). The result is a book that is both candid and insightful. The memoirs of any Secretary of State are going to be of importance, but "Madam Secretary" is actually a good read. Madeleine Korbel Albright was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1937. Her father was an official in the Czech government-in-exile who fled to London, where she remembers enduring the blitz. Her father served in several diplomatic posts after World War II and when the Communists took over Czechoslovakia in 1948 he sent his family to the United States, where he ended up running the School of International Studies at the University of Denver (where one of his prize students was Condolezza Rice). On the personal side of the ledger Albright talks about her marriage to "Newsday" scion Joe Albright, which ended in divorce, raising her three daughters, and learning late in her life that her Jewish grandparents had died in Nazi concentration camps. Earning her doctorate from Columbia, Albright worked her way from being Edmund Muskie's senior legislative assistant to work for National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brezinski in the Carter Administration. When the Democrats returned to the White House in 1992, Albright moved into the upper stratosphere of American diplomacy where she proved herself to be a Wilsonian moralist whose hero was Dean Acheson.In the most important parts of her memoir Albright provides commentary on all of the foreign policy crises with which she was involved, from Rwanda and Serbia to North Korea and Iraq, with NATO's humanitarian intervention in Kosovo being the episode that stands out most in my mind as the one she wants to present as being paradigmatic of what the Clinton administration was trying to accomplish in terms of foreign policy. Not coincidentally, it was also the specific policy on which she was the biggest advocate and primary architect. She does not make the explicit argument, but when you read of how her family came to the United States the policy seems a logical extension of her personal story. Clearly the goal was to avert a humanitarian catastrophe and not as sign of support for the Albanian guerrillas. You will also find Albright's views on the national and world figures with whom she had to deal, including Bill and Hillary Clinton,

Madam Secretary: A Memoir Mentions in Our Blog

Madam Secretary: A Memoir in Celebrating Women for World Thinking Day 2018
Celebrating Women for World Thinking Day 2018
Published by Bianca Smith • February 22, 2018

It's a day to reflect and be inspired women who've made a positive impact on the world.

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