USA TODAY US Edition

New bio reveals more of Betty Ford

- Susan Page

The adjective most often associated with Betty Ford was candor.

She was candid about her support of abortion rights and the Equal Rights Amendment, about the breast cancer she battled as first lady, and, finally, about her struggle with addiction to alcohol and prescripti­on drugs.

In “Betty Ford: First Lady, Women’s Advocate, Survivor, Trailblaze­r” (Gallery Books, 432 pp., ★★g☆), author Lisa McCubbin offers the first full-length biography of the former first lady (who died in 2011 at age 93) in more than a decade. The writing is full of cliches – “They were destined to be together,” for one – and the book is drawn in large part from the two memoirs Ford wrote, “The Times of My Life” (1978) and “Betty: A Glad Awakening” (1987). Those flaws aside, McCubbin has interviewe­d the Ford children and others who were there, and she offers a poignant account of the family interventi­on that prompted Ford to finally address her addiction.

Here’s what we learn in the book:

Washington used to be different.

When Gerald Ford was a Michigan congressma­n, he and his wife were friends with other young couples across party lines. They ranged from Richard and Pat Nixon to John and Jackie Kennedy to Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson. The capital wasn’t yet seized by the polarizati­on that freezes it now. That affected Betty Ford’s reaction to the news that Nixon had lied about being involved in the Watergate scandal and would have to resign, making Gerald Ford president. She felt “terribly sad” for the Nixons, worrying about how this would affect them, not her.

Secret Service agents are there to keep their charges safe, not to make them behave.

When Susan Ford was a teenager and prone to antics, the agents didn’t stop her; they just made sure she didn’t get in harm’s way. Years later, agents were aware of Betty Ford’s struggle with addiction but apparently didn’t address it or raise concerns with others to do so.

Alligators do not make good pets.

When his father was in Congress, Steve Ford once got a “small alligator” as a pet, which predictabl­y grew larger and less cute and once had to be fished out of the swimming pool. Steve was supposed to bring the alligator’s pen into the base- ment each night, a task that often fell to his mother. One night, Betty Ford decided to forget to do that. The next morning, the alligator had frozen to death.

The code name for the White House is ...

The Secret Service calls the president’s residence “Crown.” Which seems at odds with a nation founded by breaking from monarchy.

 ?? ANNA MOORE BUTZNER/AP ?? Former first lady Betty Ford is the subject of a new biography.
ANNA MOORE BUTZNER/AP Former first lady Betty Ford is the subject of a new biography.
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