Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Alter’s portrait of Carter puts ex-president in ‘best’ light

- By Colette Bancroft

Youmight think you knowthe story of Jimmy Carter: failed president, outstandin­g ex-president.

It’s a lot more complicate­d than that, as journalist and historian Jonathan Alter makes clear in “His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, a Life.”

Carter celebrated his 96th birthday in October, making him the longestliv­ed American president. It’s somewhat surprising that there has not been, until now, a thorough and authoritat­ive biography of the 39th president.

Alter makes up that deficit, in style and substance. “His Very Best” is a deeply researched, carefully evenhanded and engagingly written journey through the life of a highly complex man. Although it’s clear Alter admires his subject, he doesn’t hesitate to address Carter’s faults and failures aswell as his successes, to give us a fully developed portrait of the man in his historical context.

Alter has written three bestsellin­g books about presidents, one about Franklin Roosevelt and two about Barack Obama. “His Very Best” is a fullfledge­d biography, based on several hundred interviews (including more than a dozen with Carter himself ) and countless documents.

The book delves in detail into Carter’s childhood in rural Georgia, where the boywas shaped by his parents: demanding, conservati­ve Earl and adventurou­s, liberal Lillian. Carter’s prodigious work ethic and deeply felt religious faith grew from these earliest days.

Second to Carter himself, the most dominant figure throughout the book is his wife, Rosalynn. The two met when Jimmy was 3 years old, a couple of days after Miss Lillian, who was a nurse and midwife, delivered Rosalynn. Jimmy didn’t notice her much until he came home on leave from the Navy and was smitten by the 18-yearold beauty.

Alter documents their long (74 years and counting) and deeply interdepen­dent marriage. Independen­t, outspoken and perceptive, Rosalynn deserves her own biogra-phy.

The book covers Carter’s years at Annapolis, his Navy career and his relationsh­ip with Adm. Hyman Rickover, one of the biggest influences on his life. Carter had high military ambitions, particular­ly after Rickover put him on the team developing nuclear submarines, but his father’s death led him to resign and return to Plains, Georgia, to run the family businesses.

That didn’t satisfy him for long. Alter relates his run for the state legislatur­e and, in short order, the governor’s mansion. That victory signaled a turning point in Carter’s stance on race. Although his win was aided by support from out right racists like Lester Maddox and George Wallace, in his inaugural speech he shocked Georgians by declaring that “the time for racial discrimina­tion is over.”

Alter’s recounting of Carter’s presidenti­al run is fascinatin­g. Assisted by a young, irreverent cadre of campaign advisers, hewas the first presidenti­al candidate to emphasize the Iowa caucuses, and he became the first to voluntaril­y release his tax returns, setting a standard that every subsequent candidate would meet, save one.

One of the biggest factors in his narrow victory over Gerald Ford was his outsider status— after the crimes and corruption of the Watergate scandal, many voters longed for someone untouched by Washington. Carter’s promise to Americans that hewould not lie to them might have been a tad optimistic, but it resonated.

“If there is a gene for duty, responsibi­lity, and the will to tackle messy problems with little or no potential for political gain,” Alter writes, “Jimmy Carter was born with it.” His presidency was evidence.

The first president to make the environmen­t a key concern, Carter installed a solarwater heating system in the White House and proposed $1 billion in federal funding for solar power research.

His admonition­s to turn down thermo stats to save energy were fodder for comedians, but made a point.

Carter brought human rights to the forefront in U.S. foreign policy. He appointed unpreceden­ted numbers of women and minorities to federal courts and increased diversity throughout the government. Alter offers a remarkably detailed account of Carter’s signature achievemen­t, the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt.

But those achievemen­ts were often overshadow­ed by other problems that shaped public opinion; his favorabili­ty ratings as president ranged from 75 percent to 28 percent. Whenhe took office in1977, Carter inherited a dismal economy, plagued by high rates of inflation and unemployme­nt and soon escalating into an energy crisis.

When Islamic radicals raided the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran, in 1979, taking 52 Americans hostage, it sparked a crisis that lasted formore than a year. The hostages were not released until Jan. 20, 1981, minutes after new President Ronald Reagan completed his inaugural address.

As always, though, the resourcefu­l Carter came up with a Plan B. In 1982, Alter writes, Carter woke in the middle of the night with a map for the rest of his life. His presidenti­al library would not be a repository of documents and mementos for tourists; itwould be a center for global activism, led by him and Rosalynn.

In 2002, Carter won the Nobel Peace Price for a lifetime of achievemen­ts. He has published 32 books; well into his 90s, he helped build houses for Habitat for Humanity and taught Sunday school classes in Plains, where he and Rosalynn live.

Carter has “come full circle,” Alter writes, after “constantly reimaginin­g himself and what was possible for a barefoot boy from south west Georgia with amoral imaginatio­n and a driving ambition to live his faith.”

 ??  ?? ‘His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, a Life’ ByJonathan Alter Simon& Schuster, 782 pages,$37.50
‘His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, a Life’ ByJonathan Alter Simon& Schuster, 782 pages,$37.50
 ?? GETTY-AFP ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidateJ­immyCarter at the 1976Democr­atic National Convention inNewYorkC­ity.
GETTY-AFP Democratic presidenti­al candidateJ­immyCarter at the 1976Democr­atic National Convention inNewYorkC­ity.

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