Saturday, April 22, 2017
something about "I Should Be Dead: My Life Surviving Politics, TV, and Addiction" by Bob Beckel
Bob Beckel's long political career included holding office as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State during the Carter Administration and managing Walter Mondale's presidential campaign. In the years since, he has gained a little more recognizability through his frequent appearances as a political analyst on the news networks. The confessional I Should Be Dead relays some difficult sequences from Beckel's youth and then efficiently details his professional life and recovery. His father's alcoholism is a defining phenomenon, and since childhood Beckel has lived his life as a survivor. Even though it is the book's selling point, Beckel's own debauchery does not occupy a lot of time in the narrative. The man was a functional addict, so you read about campaigns, and now and again Beckel reminds you that this narrator was working with generous amounts of cocaine and alcohol in his bloodstream. It is a painfully personal tale, but Beckel forgoes emotional depth and tells it with a genial directness that makes for an easy read.
Note: I was hoping for more of a political memoir.
Labels:
abuse,
addiction,
alcohol,
alcoholism,
autobiography,
Bob Beckel,
campaign,
drugs,
history,
Jimmy Carter,
memoir,
news,
personality,
political,
politics,
President,
Robert,
survivor,
television,
Walter Mondale
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