Jean Edward Smith - Works

Works

  • Eisenhower in War and Peace, New York: Random House, 2012.
  • FDR, New York: Random House, 2007 (won the 2008 Francis Parkman Prize awarded by the Society of American Historians)
  • Grant, New York: Simon and Schuster, 2001.
  • The Face of Justice: Portraits of John Marshall (with William H. Gerdts, Wendell D. Garrett, Frederick S. Voss, and David B. Dearinger), Huntington, West Virginia: Huntington Museum of Art, 2001.
  • John Marshall: Definer of a Nation, New York: Henry, Holt & Company, 1996.
  • Lucius D. Clay: An American Life, New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1990.
  • George Bush's War, New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1992.
  • The Constitution and American Foreign Policy
  • Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Debated (with Herbert Levine)
  • The Conduct of American Foreign Policy Debated (with Herbert Levine)
  • The Evolution of NATO with Four Plausible Threat Scenarios (with Steven L. Canby), Ottawa, Canada: Canada Department of National Defence, 1987.
  • The Papers of Lucius D. Clay (ed.)
  • Germany Beyond the Wall: People, Politics, and Prosperity
  • The Wall as Watershed, Arlington, Virginia: Institute for Defence Analyses, 1966.
  • Der Weg ins Delemma, 1965.
  • The Defence of Berlin, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1963.

Read more about this topic:  Jean Edward Smith

Famous quotes containing the word works:

    Are you there, Africa with the bulging chest and oblong thigh? Sulking Africa, wrought of iron, in the fire, Africa of the millions of royal slaves, deported Africa, drifting continent, are you there? Slowly you vanish, you withdraw into the past, into the tales of castaways, colonial museums, the works of scholars.
    Jean Genet (1910–1986)

    Nature is so perfect that the Trinity couldn’t have fashioned her any more perfect. She is an organ on which our Lord plays and the devil works the bellows.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)

    Now they express
    All that’s content to wear a worn-out coat,
    All actions done in patient hopelessness,
    All that ignores the silences of death,
    Thinking no further than the hand can hold,
    All that grows old,
    Yet works on uselessly with shortened breath.
    Philip Larkin (1922–1986)