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Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century Hardcover – Deckle Edge, May 7, 2019

4.6 out of 5 stars 774

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*Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Biography*
*Winner of the
Los Angeles Times Prize for Biography*
*Winner of the 2019 Hitchens Prize*

"Portrays Holbrooke in all of his endearing and exasperating self-willed glory...Both a sweeping diplomatic history and a Shakespearean tragicomedy... If you could read one book to comprehend American's foreign policy and its quixotic forays into quicksands over the past 50 years, this would be it."--Walter Isaacson,
The New York Times Book Review

"By the end of the second page, maybe the third, you will be hooked...There never was a diplomat-activist quite like [Holbrooke], and there seldom has been a book quite like this -- sweeping and sentimental, beguiling and brutal, catty and critical, much like the man himself."--David M. Shribman,
The Boston Globe

Richard Holbrooke was brilliant, utterly self-absorbed, and possessed of almost inhuman energy and appetites. Admired and detested, he was the force behind the Dayton Accords that ended the Balkan wars, America's greatest diplomatic achievement in the post-Cold War era. His power lay in an utter belief in himself and his idea of a muscular, generous foreign policy. From his days as a young adviser in Vietnam to his last efforts to end the war in Afghanistan, Holbrooke embodied the postwar American impulse to take the lead on the global stage. But his sharp elbows and tireless self-promotion ensured that he never rose to the highest levels in government that he so desperately coveted. His story is thus the story of America during its era of supremacy: its strength, drive, and sense of possibility, as well as its penchant for overreach and heedless self-confidence. In
Our Man, drawn from Holbrooke's diaries and papers, we are given a nonfiction narrative that is both intimate and epic in its revelatory portrait of this extraordinary and deeply flawed man and the elite spheres of society and government he inhabited.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“It is impossible to read George Packer’s new biography of Richard Holbrooke without a piercing sense of melancholy, not only that a man so supremely alive should be dead, but also because such people—Our Man, in Packer’s title, the incarnation of vanished glory, imperial hubris, exceptional Americanism—no longer walk the earth… Extraordinary.”—James Traub, Foreign Policy
 

"This book is a real accomplishment; it’s hands down the best biography I have read this year... Deeply researched and reported... Sure to win a prize (or two or three) in the 2019 literary-awards sweepstakes." —Adam B. Kushner, Philadelphia Inquirer


"This is the kind of biography (massive, detailed) by the kind of author (respected, experienced) reserved for great books on great men... Packer make[s] a case for Holbrooke’s place in the pantheon, showing that there was real idealism and skill buried beneath the layers of self-regard."
—Mary Ann Gwin, 
The Seattle Times

"Riveting... A pitch-perfect portrait." —Norman Pearlstine, Los Angeles Times

"Holbrooke... has never been as interesting as he is in Packer’s sympathetic hands."—Durango Herald

"As Packer so artfully shows us, the diplomatic journey of Holbrooke and the U.S. in the last half-century carries a ton of insightful lessons about how to resolve complicated challenges that haven’t been solved – or even considered – before."—Howard Homonoff, 
Forbes

"Holbrooke’s life—and Packer’s telling of it—also offers a set of lessons about the limits of American liberalism at home and abroad, in the past and in the present...[Packer] addresses his readers in the manner of a brilliant... dinner-party conversationalist, weaving in context and anecdote and gossipy digressions that make us feel we’re being given a privileged, intimate view of the American elite... It gives us a better understanding of what happened to a generation of liberals who helped create the country we now live in." —
The Nation

"I was hooked after the first paragraph — maybe after the first sentence... Packer’s writing is lively and quick, packed with voice and with asides to the reader that only add to his credibility. Read it for the first 150 pages alone — the best primer on Vietnam you’ll find."—Laurie Hertzel,
Minneapolis Star Tribune


"A brilliant, abrasive diplomat struggles to resolve foreign conflicts while fighting bureaucratic wars at home in this scintillating biography... Packer makes him a Shakespearean character—egomaniacal, devious, sloppy enough to make presidents deny him the prize of becoming secretary of state, yet charismatic and inspiring—in a larger-than-life portrait brimming with vivid novelistic impressions... In Holbrooke’s thwarted ambitions, Packer finds both a riveting tale of diplomatic adventure—part high drama, part low pettiness—and a captivating metaphor for America’s waning power"—
Publisher's Weekly (starred)

"The riveting life of a deeply flawed diplomat whose chief shortcoming seems to have been the need to be more recognized than he was... In the end, though egotistical and quick to be insulted, Holbrooke was also, by Packer’s absorbing account, highly capable.
Students of recent world history and of American power, hard and soft, will find this an endlessly fascinating study of character and events."—
Kirkus (starred)

"In his supercharged new biography, George Packer doesn’t lose sight of Holbrooke’s spasms of near greatness, or of the high ideals that were in symbiosis with his oily machinations... At one breathless moment, Packer asks himself: 'What was he like? He didn’t want to miss a minute of his life.' In this book, we don’t, and we come away enlightened and sad."—Charles Trueheart, 
American Scholar

"In an entertaining and humane new biography, Our Man, George Packer portrays a deeply flawed figure of tremendous energy, blindness, and passion... It is a subject worthy of Packer’s considerable narrative gifts: a tragicomic hero who poured all of his infuriating ambitions and intensities into a life of purpose on stages both global and bureaucratically small."—Michael O'Donnell, Washington Monthly

"The book has all the qualities of a nonfiction novel... For future historians, Our Man will be a valuable artifact." —Thomas Meaney, The New Republic

"A pensive portrait of a man permanently biased toward action... Packer, who knew Holbrooke personally, celebrates the man’s larger-than-life qualities while remaining clear-eyed about his profound flaws. And by the end, he convincingly argues that Holbrooke’s passing signifies the loss of something larger still, a sense of American possibility, now seemingly out of reach."—Booklist (starred)

"In capturing the essence of Richard Holbrooke and the era he embodied, George Packer portrays a figure far more fraught than I ever imagined... A vividly detailed non-fiction narrative that aims to capture its subject in full... Holbrooke’s immense talents were ultimately undercut by his profound shortcomings; they make the story of his exceptional life as tragic as it is fascinating."
—Rennie A. Silva,
Diplomatic Courier

"Packer, a staff writer at the Atlantic, hasn’t written a traditional biography... Holbrooke is a fascinating character."—Foreign Policy

"If to have read the book is to have met the man, then George Packer has done us an infinite service... He has made a contribution to our understanding of the conduct of diplomacy."
Matthew AsadaThe Foreign Service Journal

"By the end of the second page, maybe the third, you will be hooked. You’ll come to understand that the author, New Yorker writer George Packer, understood Holbrooke, understood power, understood America in its eclipse at the end of the 20th century and into the 21st. You’ll come to understand that Packer knew the great man, in fact thought he was great: great of ambition, of character, of intelligence, of intuition, of impulse, and, above all, great of flaws, including betrayal. And you’ll realize that Holbrooke, who died nine years ago, was central to what was central to much of postwar American life, and that in a terrifying way his story is America’s story." —David M. ShribmanBoston Globe

"Packer is a graceful stylist... A highly readable and innovative biography." — Jamie KirchickCommentary

"Extraordinary." —Lee Scott, The Florida Times-Union

"
Not only a riveting read but also an eye-opening psychodrama, revealing the feuds and friendships behind the scenes that often drove and always colored American foreign policy for five decade... This tale of Holbrooke’s diplomatic ambition and dramatic death is also intended as an authoritative historical statement about the end of an era.. The Holbrooke story will never be told better."—James P. Rubin, Politico

"This is a comprehensive biography, well-written and compelling, presenting flaws and all... Engaging." —Donald Camp, American Diplomacy

"Deeply researched, compelling."—Arab News

"Stunning... The book is probably the best guide you can find to navigating a transitional moment in American leadership and foreign policy... A gripping read." —Ben Smith, 
Buzzfeed

"This story is both gripping and surprisingly pacey, its wheels greased by revealing excerpts from Holbrooke’s personal letters and the private reflections he recorded to tape. Added to this is Packer’s arresting thesis: that his brash but erudite and driven subject symbolises something about America’s engagement with the world following the Second World War that will never be recovered after Trump."—John Bew, New Statesman

“You may ask yourself, is it worth one of the best American non-fiction writers producing a book of just under 600 pages on an arrogant and abrasive egotist whose highest sustained rank in the State Department was that of a lowly assistant secretary? The answer is unabashedly yes. This is a remarkable work about a remarkable, if deeply flawed, statesman whose career was intimately intertwined with the 50 years of American decline from Vietnam to Afghanistan.”—Jonathan Powell, 
The Spectator

“[A] magisterial tome, a blend of biography and diplomatic history on par with Steve Coll’s
Ghost Wars or Neil Sheehan’s A Bright Shining Lie… you really should read this book if you’re at all interested in the decline of our country’s elites or America’s role in the world over the past 50 years.” —Fred Kaplan, Slate
 
“Packer's energetic prose… carries the reader easily through the three main acts of Holbrooke's diplomatic life… impeccably sourced.” —Paddy Hirsch,
NPR

“Mesmerizing… An elegy not just for Holbrooke but for the vision of American power he represented… Insightful and beautifully written…” —Barbara Spindel,
The Christian Science Monitor

"No book could achieve the intensity, completeness, and narrative depth of 
Our Man without the author’s belief that he had been put on this earth to do it. The strength of the book is its focus on Holbrooke’s character, which Packer pursues much as James Boswell pursued the human truth of Samuel Johnson. The point is not to analyze things—why Yugoslavia flew to pieces, or what Johnson did for the English language with his dictionary. The point is to winkle out and bring to light the whole truth of the man: what he was like in all his contradictions." —Thomas Powers, The New York Review of Books
 
Our Man is a great, exuberant read, gossipy and thoughtful.”—Roger Boyes, The Times

"[S]prawling, mesmerizing…"
Max Boot, The Washington Post

This unconventional biography, written like a novel without notes or index, is a joy to read. The book is a singular achievement, bringing alive the last decades when America counted characters such as Holbrooke in the halls of policy-making... Packer ma[kes] Holbrooke’s life a metaphor for brash, ambitious America.
Nayan Chanda, Global Asia

"Captivating... Packer is a masterful storyteller and wordsmith."Hussein Ibish, The World News

"This book is a real accomplishment; it’s hands down the best biography I have read this year... Deeply researched and reported... Brilliant, ambitious, arrogant and committed, Holbrooke, who died suddenly in 2010, is a mesmerizing subject, and friends and enemies alike helped Packer craft this biography. Sure to win a prize (or two or three) in the 2019 literary-awards sweepstakes."
Mary Ann Gwin, The Seattle Times

“Outstanding…One of the most fascinating dissections of US power – its strengths and serious weaknesses – I’ve ever read.” —Steve Bloomfield,
The Guardian
 
“In
Our Man, George Packer has delivered a deeply affecting and ultimately tragic biography of a distinguished diplomat…. Packer brilliantly describes Holbrooke’s personal journey through each episode, exploring along the way how these wars came to shape him — and how Holbrooke applied his considerable guile, fortitude and intelligence to shape the course of the conflicts.”—Kurt Campbell, The Financial Times
 
“Best appreciated like a novel, consumed whole…charming, brilliant, cocksure.”—Jennifer Szalai,
The New York Times

About the Author

GEORGE PACKER is a staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America, which was a New York Times best seller and winner of the 2013 National Book Award. His other nonfiction books include The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq, a finalist for the 2006 Pulitzer Prize, and Blood of the Liberals, winner of the 2001 Robert F. Kennedy Book Award. He is also the author of two novels and a play, Betrayed, winner of the 2008 Lucille Lortel Award, and the editor of a two-volume edition of the essays of George Orwell.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf; 1st edition (May 7, 2019)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 608 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0307958027
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0307958020
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.6 x 1.89 x 9.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 774

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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
774 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2019
Lately, I've been reading "Our Man," by George Packer, a highly anecdotal and incomplete biography of Richard Holbrooke, whom all of us of a certain age in the Foreign Service know well.

The book is fascinating and maddening at the same time. It is fascinating for the depth of the stories Packer has somehow dredged up about Holbrooke that put on full display the richness and borderline insanity of a life lived at a hundred miles an hour that never, ever slowed down. The sheer brilliance, self-absorption, cruelty, ravening ambition and craven sycophancy of the man are at once irritating, tragic and highly entertaining. It's also profoundly moving in a way as a history of an almost great man whose glaring flaws stopped him from achieving his ultimate ambition -- Secretary of State. It's a great read, and every page has some new revelation -- at least for me.

Now for the maddening part. It focuses only on three critical parts of Holbrooke's life: his early career in Vietnam, his travails over Bosnia, and his ultimately failed efforts with regard to Afghanistan. Everything else pretty much gets short shrift, and let's just say that the book is not an academic work. The tone adopted by the author shifts alternately between revelatory, gossipy, and occasionally snarky in a Tom Wolfe kind of way. The book is more a series of very long Atlantic articles than it is a proper biography.

Also, the book has no index -- no index! This is most important to people who actually knew Holbrooke or participated in the same events, as they are most likely to give "Our Man" a "Washington read," but can't if there is no index at all. In addition, while there are loads of pictures, there are no captions! (note: I later found that there were captions, but they were buried on pp 591-2 of the book, with no indication in the table of contents that they existed. What was Packer thinking? Perhaps that anyone who bothered to read his book would be a player like Holbrooke and already would know everyone in the pictures? Speaking as a person who hovered on the edges of power, but was rarely at its center, I recognized most of the players, but by no means all.

In any case, read as much as you can spare time for. It's a tome. I found the chapter "Swallow Hard" particularly illuminating.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2020
If you happen to be a friend who trusts my advice, be certain to enjoy the pleasures from devouring Our Man. You’ll receive immense satisfaction on many levels. If you don’t know me, I offer you three ways to build your own conviction this book is one you’ve been searching for.

The most resounding endorsement I’ve read in the Sunday New York Times Book Review in years appeared in its cover story of last May 6th, written by none other than Walter Isaacson. I won’t summarize, just quote a few lines of his unqualified enthusiasm: ‘If you could read only one book to comprehend America’s foreign policy and its quixotic forays into quicksands over the past 50 years, this would be it.’

And what about the caliber of the storytelling? ‘The result is so bracing that Our Man not only revitalizes but in some ways reinvents the art of journalistic biography.’ And is there a Shakespeare-worthy leading character? Holbrooke is, writes Isaacson, ‘the last great freewheeling diplomat of the American Century. I doubt that any novel, not even one co-written by Graham Greene and F. Scott Fitzgerald, could have captured Holbrooke fully, and I certainly thought that no biography ever would. But now one has.’

I revisited Isaacson’s review after savoring George Packer’s tale through its final page. And thought if you ever find yourself teaching a class in book review writing, simply hand out this exemplar to those so interested and say no more. Be sure to enjoy this fully rounded review for its craft as well as its insights into this amazing work.

Would you like a second professional opinion? Turn to the New York Review of Books feature article by Thomas Powers of last June 6th. As a long-time subscriber, I can’t remember another matching this unbridled endorsement. ‘No book could achieve the intensity, completeness, and narrative depth of Our Man without the author’s belief he had been put on this earth to do it. The strength of the book is its focus on Holbrooke’s character, which Packer pursues much as James Boswell pursued the human truth of Samuel Johnson.’

And what about the richness of its sub-stories? ‘Packer’s hundred pages on the American failure in Vietnam tell the story as forcefully as any hundred pages ever written about the war.’

Third, here’s a frugal tasting-offer to tempt your palate. Just read Packer’s preface. Seven pages and you will have dived into a clear, cool pool on a hot summer day. You will immediately sense the writing, its intimacy, the characters, the story, its bewilderment, the sense of many wrenching plots about to unfold. In this short a space your own sensors for full engagement are likely to arouse and be ready to go.

If so, best regards from Isaacson, Powers and Moloney for encouraging you into George Packer’s masterpiece; which in a fair world should win recognition in every eligible category. Most important, the category of your own enjoyment and fulfillment in living through these formidable times.

Thomas W. Moloney
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Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2019
This book is a good character study of Holbrooke, a brilliant but egocentric and in some ways, a shallow man. It chronicles his rise to power via Viet Nam and ends with him trying to get a walk-on part in the Obama administration like one of those aging athletes who wants to limp onto the field one more time - and just doesn't know when to stop.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2019
Read and thoroughly enjoyed Packer’s “The Unwinding” a few years ago. He is a brilliant prose stylist and incisive analyst, creating books where the pages snap, crackle and flip themselves. (In “The Unwinding” he even does a convincing takedown of the myth of “good ol’ workin’ class” Joe Biden that’s useful to consider in this election cycle.)

In this current book, which reads like a novel and has no index, he gives a dazzling portrayal of Richard Holbrooke’s life and career from Vietnam to Afghanistan. He was indeed a career and moral bulldozer of a personality that got results while plowing under friends, foes and innocents alike, never looking back but always sharp to see the next main chance at his personal advancement. Packer does a good job of bringing the man and his times to vivid life, also reminding us that oftentimes our “public servants” can be complicated human beings with complex motives and challenged ethics. In evaluating them we have to look at the whole package and rate them accordingly. Ultimately, I find Holbrooke fascinating and unlivable, but while I wouldn’t want him as a friend I do find Packer’s portrayal does manage to spur a little deep sympathy for that driven soul.

Finally, If one hasn’t already read Graham Greene’s “The Quiet American” it would make a perfect companion volume to Packer’s brilliant take on a certain type of well meaning but brutally ambitious American diplomat in the fraught twentieth century.
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Top reviews from other countries

James
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating insight into a mostly terrible person
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 14, 2023
I knew of Richard Holbrooke only by name - this book did an excellent job of fleshing out his character and putting him into his historical context. I was left aghast at some of his behaviour but it makes for a cracking read.
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Terry Ames
5.0 out of 5 stars Power hungry.
Reviewed in Canada on October 4, 2019
A great read. Such insight in to the man and his journey in power.
Matien Tjallema
1.0 out of 5 stars A fine book
Reviewed in Germany on April 5, 2020
A fine book about a remarkable man. It covers an interesting period also. Nice to read and to understand. Another book?
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars A character study of a great and flawed man
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 10, 2019
This book ranges from Dick or Richard’s (depending on when you ask) time in Vietnam as a young idealist to his last great mission in Afghanistan. In between he makes peace in the Balkans, is US Ambassador and offends just about everybody he knows.
The extensive use of archive adds a sense of realism and the writers conversational style lends itself to an engaging book.
3 people found this helpful
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Peter
4.0 out of 5 stars What could have been
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 31, 2019
This is a full-on account about Richard Holbrooke. It is heavy volume of work by some one who got to know the American diplomat, It takes the reader on journey of Holbrooke's life which reflects the ups and downs of US foreign policy he served from his first job in Vietnam in the early-1960s until his untimely death in 2010 trying to sort out Afghanistan.
Reading this book brings the reader into the arena of high diplomacy and gives us a glimpse of what could been a brilliant career ending in Holbrooke being US Secretary of State. But it was not to be.
Strong recommendation to those interested in the man and American foreign policy he helped to shape for nearly four decades.
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