University of Arkansas Press, 1994 eISBN: 978-1-61075-155-1 | Paper: 978-1-55728-355-9 Library of Congress Classification E874.C434 1994 Dewey Decimal Classification 973.9260922
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK First Lady from Plains, first published in 1984, is Rosalynn’s Carter’s autobiography, covering her life from her childhood in Plains, Georgia, through her time as First Lady. It is “a readable, lively and revealing account of the Carters and their remarkable journey from rural Georgia to the White House in a span of ten years” (The New York Times).
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter is a leading advocate for mental health, caregiving, early childhood immunization, human rights, and conflict resolution through her work at the Carter Center, which seeks to prevent and resolve conflicts, enhance freedom and democracy, and improve health around the world.
REVIEWS
“First Lady From Plains is a readable, lively and revealing account of the Carters and their remarkable journey from rural Georgia to the White House in a span of 10 years. After her husband lost the 1980 election, Mrs. Carter admitted being ”bitter enough for both of us,” but fortunately she does not allow her spleen to overwhelm her book. She simply avoids some of the more painful personal moments of the Carter Presidency – the Bert Lance affair and Billy Carter’s embarrassing fling with the Libyans. Privately, she has said their friends and family have suffered enough, and she is not about to reopen their cases.
Mrs. Carter, who describes herself as her husband’s ”political partner,” does not accept defeat easily. Never has, never will. After he narrowly lost his first gubernatorial campaign to Lester Maddox in 1966, the Carters drove to the Georgia coast for a vacation. ”When we went through the town of Waycross,” she writes, ”where I had campaigned especially hard, once standing all night at a gospel singing, only to have the town vote solidly for Maddox, I put my head in my arms and refused to look out the window.” But Mrs. Carter no longer reacts that way when passing through politically hostile territory, and it’s a good thing, considering the number of states Jimmy Carter lost in 1980.
Mrs. Carter is tough, emotional, ambitious, strong- willed and fiercely dedicated to her husband. Her childhood, she says, ended on the day her father, a farmer and auto mechanic, died of leukemia. At 13, she had to help her mother support the family by taking in sewing and selling eggs and butter. She lived through the kind of hard times that Jimmy Carter, son of one of Plains’s better-off families, wanted voters to believe he had experienced. After her father’s death, Mrs. Carter had two goals – to live up to her father’s high expectations and to escape from Plains. In a way, her marriage to Jimmy Carter was a twofer; it allowed her to accomplish both.”
—The New York Times on the original edition, April 1984
“What makes Rosalynn Carter so interesting and her memoir so compelling is her awareness that she is part of a long and distinguished historical tradition: the southern lady in politics . . . What ought to be a continuing legacy is Rosalynn’s success in breaking new ground as a First Lady, without uprooting the traditions of the past.”
—Minneapolis Tribune
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Preface 1994
Prologue
1.
The Early Years
2.
The Return to Plains
3.
The Governors Mansion
4.
The ′76 Campaign
5.
The White House
6.
Conservation, Controversy Protection, and the Press
7.
Envoy to Latin America
8.
People, Parties, and Protocol
9.
Summit at Camp David
10.
The Office of the First Lady
11.
Iran and the Beginning of the End
12.
The Last Six Months
Epilogue
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
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University of Arkansas Press, 1994 eISBN: 978-1-61075-155-1 Paper: 978-1-55728-355-9
First Lady from Plains, first published in 1984, is Rosalynn’s Carter’s autobiography, covering her life from her childhood in Plains, Georgia, through her time as First Lady. It is “a readable, lively and revealing account of the Carters and their remarkable journey from rural Georgia to the White House in a span of ten years” (The New York Times).
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter is a leading advocate for mental health, caregiving, early childhood immunization, human rights, and conflict resolution through her work at the Carter Center, which seeks to prevent and resolve conflicts, enhance freedom and democracy, and improve health around the world.
REVIEWS
“First Lady From Plains is a readable, lively and revealing account of the Carters and their remarkable journey from rural Georgia to the White House in a span of 10 years. After her husband lost the 1980 election, Mrs. Carter admitted being ”bitter enough for both of us,” but fortunately she does not allow her spleen to overwhelm her book. She simply avoids some of the more painful personal moments of the Carter Presidency – the Bert Lance affair and Billy Carter’s embarrassing fling with the Libyans. Privately, she has said their friends and family have suffered enough, and she is not about to reopen their cases.
Mrs. Carter, who describes herself as her husband’s ”political partner,” does not accept defeat easily. Never has, never will. After he narrowly lost his first gubernatorial campaign to Lester Maddox in 1966, the Carters drove to the Georgia coast for a vacation. ”When we went through the town of Waycross,” she writes, ”where I had campaigned especially hard, once standing all night at a gospel singing, only to have the town vote solidly for Maddox, I put my head in my arms and refused to look out the window.” But Mrs. Carter no longer reacts that way when passing through politically hostile territory, and it’s a good thing, considering the number of states Jimmy Carter lost in 1980.
Mrs. Carter is tough, emotional, ambitious, strong- willed and fiercely dedicated to her husband. Her childhood, she says, ended on the day her father, a farmer and auto mechanic, died of leukemia. At 13, she had to help her mother support the family by taking in sewing and selling eggs and butter. She lived through the kind of hard times that Jimmy Carter, son of one of Plains’s better-off families, wanted voters to believe he had experienced. After her father’s death, Mrs. Carter had two goals – to live up to her father’s high expectations and to escape from Plains. In a way, her marriage to Jimmy Carter was a twofer; it allowed her to accomplish both.”
—The New York Times on the original edition, April 1984
“What makes Rosalynn Carter so interesting and her memoir so compelling is her awareness that she is part of a long and distinguished historical tradition: the southern lady in politics . . . What ought to be a continuing legacy is Rosalynn’s success in breaking new ground as a First Lady, without uprooting the traditions of the past.”
—Minneapolis Tribune
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Preface 1994
Prologue
1.
The Early Years
2.
The Return to Plains
3.
The Governors Mansion
4.
The ′76 Campaign
5.
The White House
6.
Conservation, Controversy Protection, and the Press
7.
Envoy to Latin America
8.
People, Parties, and Protocol
9.
Summit at Camp David
10.
The Office of the First Lady
11.
Iran and the Beginning of the End
12.
The Last Six Months
Epilogue
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE