Book Description
One of the most controversial chief executives in American history, Richard M. Nixon remains an enigma even thirty years after his resignation. Loved by some and hated by others, Nixons life is synonymous with a spectacular fall from power. Of the many portraits of this complex man by friends and foes alike, none have been more intimate or revealing than this memoir from his personal physician, friend, and confidante of more than forty years, John C. Lungren, M.D. Dr. Lungren, with his son and co-author John C. Lungren Jr., portrays Nixon as a paradoxical manintense, compassionate, guarded, intelligent, resilient, deeply religious, enormously successful but ultimately tragic. Lungren describes his battle to restore the presidents health after his resignation and reveals previously unknown details about Nixons two intensive hospitalizations, his near fatal vascular collapse, and his depression. Lungren experienced firsthand Nixons thoughts and feelings during the public scrutiny of federal prosecution for his role in the Watergate break-in. Accused of shielding his friend, Lungren himself came under fire; his private office was even burgled in an apparent attempt to copy Nixons private medical records. Using previously unpublished sources, original correspondence, and private photographs, Healing Richard Nixon places Nixon in an entirely new light. It provides invaluable insight into Nixons psyche, and no future research or conclusions about Nixonthe man or the presidentwill be complete without consulting this fascinating memoir.
About the Author
The late John C. Lungren, M.D., became Richard Nixons personal physician in 1952. John C. Lungren, Jr. is a former reporter for Knight-Ridder and author of Hesburgh of Notre Dame: Priest, Educator, Public Servant.
Healing Richard Nixon: A Doctor's Memoir FROM THE PUBLISHER
In the weeks following Richard Nixon's resignation from the presidency, America was fundamentally shaken. Many wondered if the nation would ever recover from the Watergate scandal. During this time of intense paranoia, Nixon's every action was scrutinized and questioned. Exiled, Nixon was a fallen man -- physically in shambles and sinking further and further into a deep depression. Dr. John C. Lungren became a campaign physician during Nixon's 1952 vice-presidential bid, and their close relationship, both personal and professional, endured until Nixon's death over forty years later. After Watergate, Nixon made a personal plea to his old friend and physician: "I want you to take care of me because I trust you and I know you wouldn't want anything from me." Lungren assumed the responsibility of caring for Nixon -- unaware that his own motives, methods, and decisions would ultimately arouse national criticism. Lungren cared for Nixon through two intensive hospitalizations, including an advanced case of phlebitis in Nixon's left leg and a near-fatal vascular collapse. Along the way, Lungren shielded the ailing Nixon from tenacious reporters and federal prosecutors, confident that his actions were saving Nixon from certain death.
Nixon's public shame and the sense of helplessness compounded by his poor health caused him acute mental anguish -- many believed he was suicidal. Lungren made Nixon's mental health a priority in his regimen for recovery, allowing Nixon the years he needed to atone for his actions and redeem himself in the public eye. Lungren offers insights into Nixon's psyche that only a personal physician -- and friend -- could have. Lungren observed in Nixon the qualities that defined him as a leader and the weaknesses that led to his political fall. He watched as Nixon surrounded himself by eager yes-men, such as H.R. Haldeman, who would never question their commander-in-chief's decisions. He listened to an impassioned and broken Nixon who, seated beside his wife, Pat, demanded, "What did we do wrong?" Lungren and Nixon discussed Gerald Ford's mistakes as president, the stinging attacks of muckraking journalists, and the history of executive power as shaped by precedent. Lungren experienced these conversations with both the interest of a concerned friend and the objective distance of a physician. Unlike any other book dealing with the highly controversial president, Healing Richard Nixon is an insider's perspective on Nixon's political career, a story of fall and redemption told through intimate conversations between doctor and patient. The Nixon that emerges is one rarely seen by the public -- vulnerable, frightened, regretful, and disarmingly human. Lungren's account is crucial to understanding the psychology of one of the most tragic figures in American political history.
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
Lungren was Richard Nixon's personal physician for more than 40 years, beginning with Nixon's vice-presidential campaign in 1952 and ending with Nixon's death in 1994. Lungren Jr. (Hesburgh of Notre Dame) wrote this memoir in his father's voice following the death of Dr. Lungren in 2000. The most interesting parts of the book describe Dr. Lungren's treatment of Nixon for depression and phlebitis, which nearly resulted in a blood clot that required immediate surgery by Lungren. The doctor suffered his own troubles for serving as Nixon's physician-hate mail, obscene phone calls, the burglarizing of his office, and a medical review panel sent by Judge John Sirica to verify that Nixon was too weak to testify at the Watergate hearings. Dr. Lungren admires Nixon but recognized some of his faults, most notably his hiring the bullying H.R. Haldeman as Nixon's chief of staff, with whom Lungren had more than one run-in. The book is valuable for its conversation about Nixon's medical ordeals after the presidency, but it tends to ramble when it discusses Nixon's politics; apparently, Lungren did not share as close a relationship with Nixon as did confidant Monica Crowley (Nixon Off the Record). Recommended for most public libraries.-Karl Helicher, Upper Merion Twp. Lib., King of Prussia, PA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.