cover image The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: The Life and Times of Washington’s Most Private First Lady

The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: The Life and Times of Washington’s Most Private First Lady

Heath Hardage Lee. St. Martin’s, $32 (400p) ISBN 978-1-250-27434-2

Biographer Lee (The League of Wives) paints an intriguingly sympathetic portrait of first lady Pat Nixon (1912–1993), framing her as an unfairly maligned figure (she was famously nicknamed “Plastic Pat” for her apparent aloofness) who deserves credit for having “moved the needle substantially forward for women’s issues.” It was during Nixon’s stint as second lady that the press first tagged her as “too perfect” (she had “a doll’s terrifying poise,” according to one journalist). Though such perceptions were “partially a problem of Pat’s making” because of her reticence with the press, Lee argues that Nixon was still greatly misinterpreted and contends that “cold and calculating” presidential aide H.R. Haldeman worked insidiously to build her negative reputation. Haldeman, incensed by Nixon’s pro-woman political agenda (including her support for abortion rights), attempted to isolate the first lady politically and socially; he covertly took over East Wing operations with his own aides, advised others not to socialize with her, and packaged her for the media “like a 1960s Barbie doll.” Lee’s fine-grained biography, though elegantly written, really only pops when the villainous Haldeman enters the scene (“One former staff person claims Haldeman told them directly that the president should... put [Pat] in a mental institution”). Still, readers in search of a new perspective on the Watergate era will find it here. (Aug.)