Douglas MacArthur: American Warrior
Arthur Herman
eBook
(Random House, June 14, 2016)
A new, definitive life of an American icon, the visionary general who led American forces through three wars and foresaw his nationâs great geopolitical shift toward the Pacific Rimâfrom the Pulitzer Prize finalist and bestselling author of Gandhi & Churchill Douglas MacArthur was arguably the last American public figure to be worshipped unreservedly as a national hero, the last military figure to conjure up the romantic stirrings once evoked by George Armstrong Custer and Robert E. Lee. But he was also one of Americaâs most divisive figures, a man whose entire career was steeped in controversy. Was he an avatar or an anachronism, a brilliant strategist or a vainglorious mountebank? Drawing on a wealth of new sources, Arthur Herman delivers a powerhouse biography that peels back the layers of mythâboth good and badâand exposes the marrow of the man beneath. MacArthurâs life spans the emergence of the United States Army as a global fighting force. Its history is to a great degree his story. The son of a Civil War hero, he led American troops in three monumental conflictsâWorld War I, World War II, and the Korean War. Born four years after Little Bighorn, he died just as American forces began deploying in Vietnam. Hermanâs magisterial book spans the full arc of MacArthurâs journey, from his elevation to major general at thirty-eight through his tenure as superintendent of West Point, field marshal of the Philippines, supreme ruler of postwar Japan, and beyond. More than any previous biographer, Herman shows how MacArthurâs strategic vision helped shape several decades of U.S. foreign policy. Alone among his peers, he foresaw the shift away from Europe, becoming the prophet of Americaâs destiny in the Pacific Rim. Here, too, is a vivid portrait of a man whose grandiose vision of his own destiny won him enemies as well as acolytes. MacArthur was one of the first military heroes to cultivate his own public personaâthe swashbuckling commander outfitted with Ray-Ban sunglasses, riding crop, and corncob pipe. Repeatedly spared from being killed in battleâhis soldiers nicknamed him âBullet Proofââhe had a strong sense of divine mission. âMacâ was a man possessed, in the words of one of his contemporaries, of a âsupreme and almost mystical faith that he could not fail.â Yet when he did, it was on an epic scale. His willingness to defy both civilian and military authority was, Herman shows, a lifelong traitâand it would become his undoing. Tellingly, MacArthur once observed, âSometimes it is the order one disobeys that makes one famous.â To capture the life of such an outsize figure in one volume is no small achievement. With Douglas MacArthur, Arthur Herman has set a new standard for untangling the legacy of this American legend.Praise for Douglas MacArthurâThis is revisionist history at its best and, hopefully, will reopen a debate about the judgment of history and MacArthurâs place in history.ââNew York Journal of BooksâUnfailingly evocative . . . close to an epic . . . More than a biography, it is a tale of a time in the past almost impossible to contemplate today as having taken place, with MacArthur himself as a figure perhaps too remote to understand, but all the more important to encounter.ââThe New CriterionâWith Douglas MacArthur: American Warrior, the prolific and talented historian Arthur Herman has delivered an expertly rendered, compulsively readable account that does full justice to MacArthurâs monumental achievements without slighting his equally monumental flaws.ââCommentary