Leaders

Richard NIXON   |      |   Howard BAKER

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Leaders
Leaders

PRESENTATION/ASSOCIATION FIRST EDITION OF LEADERS, INSCRIBED BY PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION TO HOWARD BAKER—"A GREAT SENATE LEADER"

(BAKER, Howard) NIXON, Richard. Leaders. New York: Warner Books, (1982). Octavo, original half black cloth, original dust jacket.

First trade edition, an especially significant presentation/association copy inscribed on the half title by President Nixon in the year of publication, "To Howard Baker—A great Senate Leader—from RMN 1982." In 1973 Baker, described by Mitch McConnell as "one of the Senate's most towering figures," was the ranking Republican on the Senate committee investigating the Nixon White House in the Watergate hearings.

As Eisenhower's vice-president and America's 37th president, Richard Nixon met most world leaders of the latter half of the 20th century. In Leaders, Nixon shares "revealing anecdotes, recalls words of wisdom, and brings to bear his own judgments" about these influential figures. This copy's recipient, Howard Baker, was Senate Republican leader for three terms and has been described by Mitch McConnell as "one of the Senate's most towering figures." In 1973 he "was the ranking Republican on the special Senate committee that investigated wrongdoing of the Nixon White House in the Watergate affair. In televised hearings that riveted the nation, he repeatedly asked the question on the minds of millions of Americans: 'What did the president know, and when did he know it?'… Friendly and unfailingly courteous, he was popular with lawmakers in both parties, a kind of figure almost unrecognizable on Capitol Hill today." Baker, who also served as President Reagan's White House chief of staff, had been rumored to be a possible running mate to Nixon in 1968. "Had Nixon selected him and gone on to win the election, and had Baker remained on the ticket for the Nixon landslide victory of 1972, Baker would have become president when Nixon resigned in 1974" (New York Times). "First Printing: October 1982" on copyright page. With 32 pages of photographic illustrations. Published the same year as the signed limited edition of 2500 copies.

A fine inscribed presentation copy with a major association.

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