The Watchdog: How the Truman Committee Battled Corruption and Helped Win World War Two (Original)

Available
Product Details
Price
$32.99  $30.68
Publisher
Hanover Square Press
Publish Date
Pages
448
Dimensions
6.36 X 9.3 X 1.27 inches | 1.25 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781335449504

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About the Author

Steve Drummond is a journalist at NPR in Washington, where he has been a senior editor for more than two decades. He has been a reporter with newspapers in Florida and the Associated Press in Michigan and has written for many publications, including the St. Petersburg Times, the Detroit News, the New York Times, Education Week, and Teacher Magazine. He lives in Maryland, where he also teaches journalism at the University of Maryland.

Reviews
"This is an original and insightful chronicle of an overlooked yet critical stage in the career of Harry Truman. Not only did his path to the White House begin during World War II, his dogged devotion to detail and bipartisan passion saved many battlefield lives along with billions of dollars. Vividly, The Watchdog takes Truman from junior Missouri senator to his stunning ascension as leader of a world still fighting for freedom."--Tom Clavin, New York Times bestselling author of Lightning Down: A World War II Story of Survival


"Steve Drummond has written an engaging, clear-eyed story of an important but overlooked chapter in the life of Harry Truman. The Watchdog will make you long for an era when government could be made to work."--Evan Thomas, New York Times bestselling author of First: Sandra Day O'Connor

"It takes a thoughtful and agile reporter to see the story that others have overlooked. It takes an astute student of history to understand how the past speaks to the present. Steve Drummond is both. His unlikely tale of the Truman Committee, a shocking example of governmental success, will have readers looking anew at its chairman and namesake: the wonky senator from Missouri, with a distaste for partisanship and publicity, who became our thirty-third president."--Robin Givhan, senior critic at large of The Washington Post and author of The Battle of Versailles: The Night American Fashion Stumbled into the Spotlight and Made History

"Drummond shines a light on a dark, forgotten corner of wartime history."--Kirkus

"Drummond used a trove of documents to create this excellent narrative. The result is a well-written, engaging analysis of an often-overlooked and instructive aspect of Truman's career that was essential to the war effort."--Booklist

"Few people know the details of what [Harry Truman] did to make himself one of the most famous people in the nation, a story that is as fascinating as it is little-known, and which is told brilliantly in an important new book, The Watchdog. This is, indeed, a book that's not only hard to put down, but which has a lot to say about how government can, and should work."--Lessenberry Ink