THE AGE OF REAGAN: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order, 1964–1980
Steven F. Hayward, . . Prima/ Forum, $35 (848pp) ISBN 978-0-7615-1337-7
Hayward offers his examination, from an unabashedly conservative perspective, of American history from 1964 through the 1980 inauguration of Ronald Reagan as president, in the first part of a two-volume account. Senior fellow at the conservative Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy, he argues that liberalism reached its peak in 1964, and that the hollowness of liberal thought, played out in the flawed presidencies of Nixon, Ford and Carter, creating a political atmosphere that allowed Reagan to preside over a fundamental change in the direction of American government. In Hayward's Manichean universe, opposite the rightness of Reagan's conservatism is the wrongness of all things liberal. Labeled with the "l word," among many others, are the war on poverty, feminism, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, détente,
Reviewed on: 10/29/2001
Genre: Nonfiction
Paperback - 848 pages - 978-0-307-45369-3