The Final Days
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: Previous owner
A landmark work of political journalism, The Final Days chronicles the last months of Richard Nixon's presidency with gripping, moment-by-moment detail drawn from hundreds of interviews with key White House insiders. Woodward and Bernstein reconstruct the mounting chaos, paranoia, and moral collapse within the Nixon administration as the Watergate scandal closed in, painting an unflinching portrait of a presidency in freefall. The narrative captures the anguish of Nixon's closest aides, the fractured relationships within the Oval Office, and the agonizing deliberations that ultimately led to the first resignation of a U.S. president in history. Written with the same relentless investigative authority that defined the duo's earlier reporting, the account reads with the tension of a political thriller while remaining rigorously grounded in fact. The Final Days stands as an essential document of American democratic crisis, as relevant and revelatory today as when it was first published in 1976.
Author: Bob Woodward And Carl Bernstein
Format: Hardback
Published: 1976, Secker & Warburg
Genre: American history
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: Previous owner
A landmark work of political journalism, The Final Days chronicles the last months of Richard Nixon's presidency with gripping, moment-by-moment detail drawn from hundreds of interviews with key White House insiders. Woodward and Bernstein reconstruct the mounting chaos, paranoia, and moral collapse within the Nixon administration as the Watergate scandal closed in, painting an unflinching portrait of a presidency in freefall. The narrative captures the anguish of Nixon's closest aides, the fractured relationships within the Oval Office, and the agonizing deliberations that ultimately led to the first resignation of a U.S. president in history. Written with the same relentless investigative authority that defined the duo's earlier reporting, the account reads with the tension of a political thriller while remaining rigorously grounded in fact. The Final Days stands as an essential document of American democratic crisis, as relevant and revelatory today as when it was first published in 1976.