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99 reviews
April 16,2025
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Excellent, human biography of the self-underrated president who led the U.S. during a period of unimaginable change and danger. McCullough writes wonderfully, with a dramatist's flair but without gilding the lily whatsoever. This is a richly rewarding experience for history buffs and anyone interested in great biography.
April 16,2025
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McCullough is a good writer, though not a gifted wordsmith like Laura Hillenbrand, Ron Chernow, or Edmund Morris. Where he shines is in his impeccable research, his insightful analysis, and the clarity of his narrative structure and pacing. While his biography of Truman is perhaps a trifle overlong at a thousand pages, the narrative flow is always interesting and never feels forced. McCullough does a good job of capturing and displaying Truman's personality, while also offering perceptive thoughts on Truman's strengths and weaknesses, triumphs and failures. The last few pages, where McCullough summarizes Truman's character and accomplishments, are particularly thought provoking. While long, this book is worth the investment of time for anyone wanting to get to know Truman, the man and the president.
April 16,2025
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David McCullough's Truman takes an exhaustive, commendably objective look at America's 33rd President. Despite its length (over 1,000 pages!) it's consistently compelling thanks to McCullough's engaging writing style, chronicling Truman's rise from small-town Missouri to the Presidency with verve and excitement. What impressed me most was how willing McCullough to analyze Truman's faults and failures (a marked turn from John Adams, where he seemed eager to airbrush his subject). Truman's involvement with the Pendergast machine, his casual bigotry and slowness to evolve past it; his penchant for surrounding himself with friends and crooked cronies; his naivety towards Stalin (and rebirth as a zealous Cold Warrior), fueling the postwar Red Scare and mishandling Korea all receive fair and copious attention. Even so, these seem to enhance Truman's positive traits: his personal integrity, penchant for decisive (if sometimes misguided) action, and his surprising intelligence and clearheadedness in assessing world events. McCullough marks his assuming office after FDR's death, the adoption of the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan and the Berlin Airlift and the creation of Israel as Truman's great accomplishments, assessments which may vary depending on your own perspectives. Nonetheless, it's a rich, convincing and very human look at a man who, if not an all-time great president, nonetheless seems refreshingly honest, flexible and decisive compared to recent chief executives.
April 16,2025
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This is a great biography as fits a great man. Harry Truman was the leader who defined the world we now live in. Franklin Roosevelt feeling the desperate need to defeat Hitler made the momentous decision to ally the US with the USSR. It was Harry Truman who grasped that Russian-American alliance had served its purpose and had to end.

It was Truman who united the Free World against the Communist countries. He led the US into the Korean War, brought an end to the Communist Insurrection in Greece and created NATO. The Political Equilibrium that he created is with us today.

Truman was a infinitely charming person. He is the last President not to have attended University. He was from a family of modest means. When their finances were in dire straits, he chose to forego higher education in order to be a family breadwinner.

Truman loved classical music and was a highly talented pianist. He vigorously encouraged his daughter in her brief career as an opera singer. He never let his own musical talents decline and in 1960 performed a concert at the White House featuring the compositions of his live-time idol Ignacy Paderewski.

Like America, Truman possessed multiple talents and great virtues. David McCullough's book is a glorious tribute to this wonderful man. As a Canadian I admire the United States for having produced a leader of this quality. I hope that in the future many more politicians of Truman's stature will occupy the White House; the entire world will be the better for it.

April 16,2025
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Having read McCullough's life of Harry Truman, I feel like I know a President that I had felt I knew but not intimately. This book gives you the most intimate view of Truman and his granite-like greatness as the forger of the American future, if not the world's. McCullough's research focuses on his ordinariness and how it becomes, when needed, extraordinary. The author details these instances for more than a 1,000 pages including notes.

I wouldn't call it titillating, but it does answer almost all of our questions. One might say, "Who asks about Truman, and why should we care?" He happened to be in the White House when he was most needed, and according to McCullough, that's how the Founding Fathers intended it to be--like the good luck the U.S. had with Lincoln.

If I were a political science or American history professor, this would be required reading for my course, since it is almost a textbook of how our government works and what a good citizen, such as Harry S. Truman , should resemble.
April 16,2025
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This was fantastic. It does take commitment to get through. This book is HUGE. I’ll be honest, I almost gave up during his senate years (after about 400 pages) but after reading the many positive reviews, continued. I’m glad I did. I loved how McCullough showed Truman has human. He made many mistakes. However, I also loved how genuine he was. I’d forgotten how many momentous events in US history Truman was a part of. Yet, he remained true to himself. This is one I’ll be thinking about for a while to come.
April 16,2025
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This is a brilliant book about one of our finest

David McCullough's "Truman" has won many accolades and awards, chief among them the Pulitzer Prize. After reading this wonderful book from cover-to-cover in less than a week, I'm convinced that this book deserves all of the praise it has received, and more.

"Truman" is the ultimate, complete package in a presidential biography. Even a novice of 20th century history (this writer included) would have a list of important events that he or she would want to read about in a Truman bio. McCullough covers them all, and in detail: the decision to drop the atomic bomb, FDR's death and the transition to the Truman administration, the Potsdam conference, the creation of the United Nations, the Korean War, the firing of MacArthur, the 1948 election, his decision to not run in 1952, etc. McCullough touches all of the bases beautifully.

The highest compliment I can think to give McCullough for this book is the sense of balance in his writing and how he brings Truman to life. Mostly absent from this book, thankfully, is the rampant cheerleading and bootlicking that plague other presidential biographies. McCullough isn't a Truman admirer who puts a positive spin on every significant event during Truman's presidency. It's obvious that McCullough thinks highly of Truman, but he grapples with the controversies of Truman without softpeddling, unlike Stephen Ambrose's one-volume "Eisenhower: Soldier & President," where Ambrose neglects important events and spends entirely too much time raining down praise on Ike.

This thoroughly researched book presents Truman in a fair and balanced manner, and much of that research is based on Truman's diaries. "Truman" covers the president's bad decisions as well as his good ones, with the president's rationale behind those decisions.

I highly recommend this book and I believe it sits high atop the heap of the many available presidential biographies. McCullough is one of America's finest historians. Buy this book, read it, and in the end, be disappointed that it's over. (Orig. Review Dec. '04)
April 16,2025
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Author David McCullough’s writing flowed with an ease and clarity that made this biography of Harry S Truman read like a novel. It captured the complexity beneath Truman’s common man exterior, his capacity to grow and ‘prove equal to tasks seemingly too large for him’ and brought a sense of drama to the events and accomplishments of his presidency. For me, the greatest revelation in the book was how limited Truman's options were when he made the decision that ended WWII and that he later refused to consider using nuclear weapons against China during the Korean war.

Overall, this was an outstanding portrait of an extraordinary man and a fascinating overview of a pivotal time in American and world history. It has been my evening quiet time companion for several months now and I will genuinely miss reading it.

April 16,2025
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One of my very favorite books. I really felt like I got to know Truman - especially in certain sections such as when McCullough retraces Truman's steps from the Capitol to the White House when he was informed of FDR's death. Can you imagine what was going through his mind? WOW.
April 16,2025
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992 pages not including foot notes on our 33rd President-you'll know more about Truman than about your good friends after this read. Took me a long time to get through. An easy book not to pick up, but when I did, I enjoyed it. McCullough does a good job of capturing time and place. An unlikely President through some quirks of fate, Truman seems like a decent man with a true desire to do right by his countrymen. I often wondered what he'd make of things today.
April 16,2025
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I started this on my honeymoon in 2016. I picked it up and put it down over the years. The stop/start nature of my reading has nothing to do with quality and everything to do with the book's length and my own moods. I've finally finished it, and I'm so glad to have read it. I feel deep affection for Harry Truman. There were times when I was reduced to tears because his old-world Missouri-ness reminded me so much of my grandparents. What a man. What a book.
April 16,2025
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David McCullough is an amazing writer of history. He has lots of documentation to support what he writes, yet he has a wonderful writing style that read quite like a novel in many respects. I only had limited knowledge of Truman, and this book filled in the blanks. Sometimes the book gave more detail than I felt was necessary, but overall an excellent look at the former President and the real Truman. Well worth reading.
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