Donna's Book: "A Full Life: Reflections at 90" by Jimmy Carter (Simon & Schuster, 2015)
Reasons for choice:
When I was an exchange student at Georgetown University in 1995/6, I took a class on American foreign policy. The professor, Dr Q, gave a lecture on Carter's presidency and talked about how he'd ignored the Cold War when formulating his foreign policy and it absolutely fascinated me. I wanted to learn everything that I could about Jimmy after that. I wrote my PhD on his foreign policy towards the Horn of Africa and published my first book on that subject. Without Jimmy Carter, I wouldn't be where I am today: I wouldn't have the career that I have and I wouldn't have the life that I have. But besides that, I think he's a really amazing man. He works constantly to make the world a better place, and even though he's battling cancer he's still working for that same cause. He is my inspiration and I adore him. And that's why I want to read his latest book.
Comments:
Having read this book, in which Jimmy Carter reflects on his ninety years of life, I feel more like I've had a conversation with him rather then having spent a few hours reading about him. Jimmy has packed so much into his life that it would have been impossible for him to go into any detail and there seems to be a basic assumption that most readers would already know much of what happened. The sections on the presidential years read more like a series of lists of what was accomplished -- which is far more than most critics would give him credit for -- and what still remained to be done. Even with the latter, the foundations laid by Carter were far-reading and widespread and many subsequent presidents too credit for achievements that were not theirs alone. But what this book did for me was make me feel like I knew Jimmy-the-man a little better. His memories of his childhood were endearing but probably shocking to the average childhood, even in the rural south, today! His attitude and approach to his life was, if anything, a bit daunting. This man was clearly a force of nature ... but maybe that's the reason why achieved as much as he did, and why the Carter Center has the recognition and the reputation that it does.
Carter's honesty was also refreshing, especially when he talked about his relationship with his beloved Rosalynn. At times I was left wondering why she put up with him, but then I'd turn a page and read some more, and I realised why she did. And why he cherishes her so.
Perhaps the hardest section to read was when Jimmy was discussing his family medical history and the deaths, at relatively young ages, of his father, brother and sisters from pancreatic cancer. At the time of writing, Carter explained that he was being regularly monitored for signs of the disease but was still in good health. As we all know, that has since changed and his rather stark assessment that, should he develop the disease and it spread to other vital organs, his life expectancy would likely only be a few months was, given his current health condition, chilling.
Having read this book, though, and learned more about Carter-the-man, I know that Carter is not dwelling on that but instead is focusing on what needs to be done today. Carter has LIVED every one of his ninety-one years and, if nothing else, his "Reflections at Ninety" proves that.
It also proves that the world would have been a much poorer place without Jimmy Carter. And I know that my life would too.