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Three Days in January

Young Readers' Edition: Dwight Eisenhower's Final Mission

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In January 1961, three days before President Dwight D. Eisenhower passed the torch to John F. Kennedy, the president had one final mission.

In the young readers' edition of his New York Times bestselling book, Fox News anchor Bret Baier examines the historic transition and Eisenhower's last chance to lead the country he loved through his legendary farewell address and his personal appeals to Kennedy.

Baier paints a vivid picture of the contrasts between old and new at the beginning of a decisive decade in American history. Eisenhower and Kennedy were very different men. Eisenhower, at seventy, was an elder statesman, a five-star Army general during WWII, and one of the most popular Republican presidents of the past century. Kennedy, a forty-three-year-old Democrat, had captured the nation's attention with his energy and youth, but was inexperienced.

Eisenhower believed he had hard-won knowledge to pass on to his successor, but he didn't know if Kennedy would listen. It was Eisenhower's final mission as president to leave the new president, and the country, with the lessons he had learned and guidance for a direction forward.

Meticulously researched, broad in scope, and full of timely insights, this edition will enable young readers to experience a piece of "living history" and will inspire a deeper understanding of the pivotal moments that forged the next seventy-five years.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Danny Campbell makes what could have been a dry political science text into a relatively engaging examination of the last days of the Eisenhower administration. Campbell's conversational style carries the listener along, even during some of the more arcane sections. The focus of the work is Ike's efforts to make the transition to the Kennedy administration as smooth as possible. The audiobook also examines at some length the outgoing president's farewell message, which was far more than its memorable warning about the growing military industrial complex. The author opens with a biography of Eisenhower that is detailed enough to provide context but short enough that it doesn't slow the work or detract from its major premise. R.C.G. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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