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Frost/Nixon (tie-in): One Journalist, One President, One Confession

Frost/Nixon (tie-in): One Journalist, One President, One Confession
By David Frost

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Product Description

Published to coincide with the launch of Ron Howard's blockbuster film, and following on from the huge success of the eponymous West End and Broadway play, Frost/Nixon tells the extraordinary story of how David Frost pursued and landed the biggest fish of his career.

When he first conceived the idea of interviewing Richard Nixon and trying to bring the ex-President to confront his past, he was told on all sides that the project would never get off the ground. Yet in the end he succeeded, and the resulting television series drew larger audiences than any news programme ever had in the United States, before being shown all over the world.

Including hilarious tales of the people Frost encountered along the way and fascinating insights into the making of the series itself, this book provides an account of the only public trial that Nixon would ever have, and a revelation of the man’s character as it appeared in the stress of twelve gruelling sessions before the cameras. Fully revised and updated with historical perspective, and including transcripts of the edited interviews, Frost/Nixon describes David Frost’s quest to produce one of the most dramatic pieces of television ever broadcast.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #121214 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-11-21
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'A fascinating document of how one of the key moments in American political history came to have a British twist.'
--The 50 Best Winter Reads - The Independent

About the Author

Sir David Frost, often described as a 'one-man conglomerate', is the only person to have interviewed the last seven presidents of the United States and the last six prime ministers of Great Britain. He lives in London, Hampshire and on British Airways.


Customer Reviews

Hello, Good evening and Welcome4
With the release of the New Film Frost/Nixon I read this to try and help me enjoy the film more and it certainly helps.

Much of the films dialogue is here in the book and not just the actual interviews themselves although these are at the back of the book as transcripts along with comments from Frost.

Frost outlines just how he went about securing the interviews and the team he asselmbled to help him prepare for the interviews I thinbk what surpised me was that it seemed Frost got far more from Nixon that he ever thought he would.

The book itself is a bit jumbled by that I mean by page 130 Frost has already taken us through the actual interviews thereafter we go back explaining the background on Nixon's policies and of course Watergate. There are some very up to date perspectives from Frost indeed mentions of the actual play and fim Frost/Nixon.

The reason for the jumble is that this is a book that incorporates previous text from an earlier book written by Frost in the late 70s.

Despite all that if you love the fim then I would say read this to gain a bit more background and if you really don't know much about the story and are looking for something to read before seeing the film then I don't think this will spoil it.

I also had the Amazon copy of the actual Watergate interview and reading the transcript while viewing this was even better as Frost writes comments in these stating the key points of when he knew Nixon was on the ropes.

Flawed but fascinating3
This is an odd book, really, as it is really two books in one. The first half tells the story of how the interviews came about, and the behind the scenes story of the actual taping, followed by a short biography covering the rest of Richard Nixon's life and his re-emergence from obscurity. David Frost also takes some time to reflect on the man himself, thirty years on, and you do get the impression that he can't really decide now whether he actually dislikes him as much as he seems to have done at the time of the actual recordings. Time, it would appear, is going to be kinder to Richard Nixon than we might have thought. His foreign policy, race relations policy and economic policy are all viewed much more favourably with the passage of the years... if only everyone could forget about that little matter of Watergate...
The second half is the actual transcripts of the "Frost/Nixon" interviews themselves, including guidance notes from David Frost injected into the text referring to quite what he was thinking and/or trying to achieve at that moment. On the page as cold, dry text, the interviews tend to lose some of their impact - part of the fascination of the originals was seeing Mr Nixon himself and his various reactions - also, the "ums", "ahs" and half finished phrases don't really help clarify the arguments when they are in written form. The transcripts are, of course, very necessary to put the first half of the book in context, and are obviously a very good written reference work for anyone researching Richard Nixon to dip into rather than constantly having to refer to the taped interviews.
The photographic section is not great as the "backstage" source photographs seem to be rather smudgy (1970s film not aging well, I suppose) and the rest are off air images, which are seldom great.
Maybe a more straightforward retelling of the Watergate story at the top of the book and an appendix listing the main people involved would have helped to tell the overall story. If you hadn't read any other books about Watergate, you might get a bit lost with all the references - it does assume a lot of foreknowledge on the part of the reader. Even a basic Nixon timeline would have helped put things in context. Of course, maybe David Frost assumes his readers are clever enough not to need that.
Overall, slightly flawed, but a fascinating study of a very bizarre chapter in recent American history.

Fabulous read5
Having watched the film about the interview, this book was a perfect behind the scenes account of the build up and actual interview process. Well written, thorough and eminently enjoyable