Weekend reading

Former FP Managing Editor Carlos Lozada has a great piece in Sunday’s Washington Post, "An Extremely Abridged History of the George W. Bush Presidency." Over the course of a few weeks, Lozada, now the deputy national editor at the Post, collected some of the best vignettes and quotes from the surprisingly many memoirs of the ...

Former FP Managing Editor Carlos Lozada has a great piece in Sunday's Washington Post, "An Extremely Abridged History of the George W. Bush Presidency."

Former FP Managing Editor Carlos Lozada has a great piece in Sunday’s Washington Post, "An Extremely Abridged History of the George W. Bush Presidency."

Over the course of a few weeks, Lozada, now the deputy national editor at the Post, collected some of the best vignettes and quotes from the surprisingly many memoirs of the Bush years that have already come out. Together, they serve as a kind of "alternate history" of the past seven years.

My favorite bit is FP contributor and former White House speechwriter David Frum recounting Bush’s conservationist streak:

The energy issue stirred not only Bush’s hawkish patriotism, but his ancestral puritanism. After finishing a speech practice in the Map Room one afternoon, he pointed with exasperation at a table lamp and demanded: "Do you think it’s going to occur to anybody to turn that lamp off when we leave the room?" And he walked over and flicked it off himself. It vexed him to look out the windows of the White House family quarters before sunrise and see the Executive Office Building bright with lights that had been carelessly left burning overnight.

Be sure to check out Short Stack’s article preview as well, which finds Gen. Ricardo Sanchez and former imperial viceroy Coalition Provisional Authority chief L. Paul Bremer offering inconsistent accounts of Bush’s famous Thanksgiving appearance in Iraq.

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