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April 2008 Archives

April 6, 2008

Welcome!

Welcome to "The Candy Bombers" book blog. I'm excited that after four years of gestation, the book is about ready to hit the shelves!

I'll be posting here (fairly) regularly with news from the book tour and points beyond.

If you have any questions, comments, complaints, or observations about the book, please send them to andrei@thecandybombers.com and I will respond to them here so that everyone can get in on the conversation. (Full disclosure: I'm stealing this idea from Matt Bai's "non-blog".) Let me know if I can use your name on the blog when I respond.

I also hope that if we can get a critical mass of questions for him, we might be able to have Gail "Hal" Halvorsen respond on this blog. It would be a real treat for us all.

April 8, 2008

Huffington Post entries on The Candy Bombers

Before this site went live I blogged about The Candy Bombers a few times on the three ring circus that is the Huffington Post

This blog post gave a bit of background about the book:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrei-cherny/candy-bombers-sneak-peek-_b_94580.html

This post talked about the presidential politics of 1948:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrei-cherny/candy-bombers-sneak-peek_b_94919.html

I wrote this post right after the New Hampshire primary when I and other political observers had egg on our face after Hillary Clinton's remarkable upset -- the comparison to 1948 was clear:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrei-cherny/candy-bombers-sneak-peek_b_94919.html

April 17, 2008

Publishing Date -- and a Review!

The Candy Bombers officially goes on sale today (though I've been getting reports for days of people around the country seeing it out early in their local bookstore displays). I'm doing a bunch of radio interviews across the country today and tomorrow. And we got a new review from the Washington Post express:

Andrei Cherny's new book, "The Candy Bombers," is subtitled "The Untold Story of the Berlin Airlift and America's Finest Hour," and it's everything one could want from a work of history — engrossing, informative and stirring.

Cherny takes readers inside the eerie last days of Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidency, the jubilant first meetings of Allied soldiers astride a defeated Germany, the quick pivot to the Cold War footing, the four-way 1948 presidential race and, chiefly, the intricacies of surmounting the Soviet blockade of American-occupied Berlin to bring food to the starving city, and the manner in which unplanned acts of kindness won over the people of Germany and the world.

The author does a beautiful job with both the arc of history and the minutiae of the lives of those making it.

Facebook

If you're a member of Facebook, you can join "The Candy Bombers Book Club" where I'll be posting news and views along the way. Hope to see you there!

April 20, 2008

An appropriate first note...

Andrei,

I purchased your book, The Candy Bombers, today because my uncle was one of the pilots in the airlift. When I checked the index, I see that he is mentioned on page 504! He was Lt. Robert McGuire and he flew 169 missions on the airlift (after 20+ as a B-17 pilot in WW II). I look forward to reading the book and learning more about the airlift than I have through personal research.

-- Bill, Orlando, FL (4/20/08)

Bill,

What an appropriate first note from a reader to receive! Your uncle was the pilot who had the honor of flying the 100,000th airlift flight, landing at Tegel airfield on December 31, 1948. The next day, he headed home from Germany -- one of the first pilots to see their six month tour of duty on the airlift end. What a nice bookend to our interaction sixty years later!

-- Andrei

First Reading

The first reading for The Candy Bombers was yesterday at Washington DC's world-famous Politics and Prose bookstore. Though some perceptive Tennesseans in tow pointed out that we shouldn't call it a "reading" since I didn't actually read from the book but talked about it instead, I think it went well. The highlights -- aside from Ben Cherny letting everyone in the bookstore know what he thought about his dad going on too long -- came in the question and answer portion. One gentleman had a few perceptive questions based on already having read 100 pages of the book -- it only was released less than 48 hours earlier. But the best part was the man who had been a six year old in Berlin at the time of the blockade and recounted his memories of eating acorns to survive.

Tomorrow is the DC book party with special guest, Senator Harry Reid....

Dallas Morning News

A Sunday review in the Dallas Morning News:

A successful work of popular history...an enjoyable, timely narrative

April 22, 2008

Madness in Washington

[I blogged about James Forrestal over at the Huffington Post]:

What would happen if one of the people in charge of the American military had gone mad? What if it happened while we were on the brink of World War III and no one knew about it?

Those questions are not the stuff of thrillers, but of America's history. As I retell in my new book, The Candy Bombers: The Untold Story of the Berlin Airlift and America's Finest Hour, this really did happen sixty years ago.

Secretary of Defense James Forrestal was the first person to hold that position - the Cabinet member who had more responsibility over America's armed forces than anyone who came before him. Though he has been largely forgotten - or perhaps ignored - by history, he was a driving force in shaping the policies that would guide America in the Cold War. The Marshall Plan, the doctrine of containment, and the National Security Council were all - at least in part - his brainchildren.

But by the time the Soviets blockaded western Berlin and brought the world to the brink of a new war in the midst of the 1948 campaign, he was losing his mind. He was suffering from all manner of ailments that would come within months to include severe hallucinations and paranoia. I'm not a psychologist but in consulting with them I believe his symptoms likely point to schizophrenia.

Within a year, while still serving as Harry Truman's Defense Secretary, he had spiraled out of control. In The Candy Bombers, using newly declassified documents, I shed some new light on what happened on the mysterious night that James Forrestal's life ended, but perhaps the full circumstances will never be known.

Sometimes members of the Bush Administration's highest ranks have been accused of madness. It is too glib a way of excusing some of the policies that have done so much damage to America's place in the world.

But the question remains: What would happen if one of our nation's top officials truly did go mad?

The Hometown Voice

My hometown paper, the Arizona Republic, weighed in today with a story about the book, myself, and Hal Halvorsen. A nice piece...

'Candy Bombers' recounts sweet spot in Berlin Airlift

The Candy Bombers might persuade some Americans to close the gap between the image of America 60 years ago and its image today, Cherny said. But that's not his priority.

"If people read the book and like it and are entertained, I'll be perfectly happy," he said. "But if people say the U.S. has done it before, inspired the world, and we can do it again, that's not only gravy. It makes it all worthwhile."

April 26, 2008

ABC News covers The Candy Bombers

Click here to watch the segment that ABC News Now's "Faith Matters" show did on The Candy Bombers. It has some great original footage from Hal Halvorsen.

April 28, 2008

The Candy Bombers on WNYC

Leonard Lopate, host of the top-rated local NPR show in the country, had me on to talk about The Candy Bombers:

Reuters and International Herald Tribune video

This video by Reuters TV that is on the International Herald Tribune site focuses largely on the lessons we can learn in Iraq but also has some great images of the Airlift.

April 30, 2008

Mail Bag 4-29-08

Dear Mr. Cherny,

First of all, I want you to know how fascinating I found reading about this wonderful and historical event of which I knew little , but only learned the full story from your book. You have written a superb rendition of this event that required a full explanation not only of the conditions as they existed in Europe at the end of the war, but the political environment that existed at home so as to enable the reader to fully appreciate the forces behind the outcome . I so enjoyed learning about the key characters who for reasons in many cases only explained by fate, found themselves in positions to determine the course not only of the of the airlift, but the successful resistance of the blockade that ultimately changed the whole character of the Cold War and the Soviet'sunderstanding of our fortitude.

In my mind, the Berlin Airlift was one of the greatest achievements to mankind that our country has ever performed and I therefore wish this story could somehow be formatted in a way to educate our children and young adults about the compassion and virtues that our country stands for and how we have demonstrated those in the past.(especially worthy given today's constant berating of our country in the media). I'm sure the people of Berlin would agree.

Thank you for all your efforts in researching and writing about one of "our finest hours".

I think the country owes you much gratitude, as I do, and I wish you much success with this book
-- Walter

Walter,

Thank you for your very kind note. I too hope that this story can be told and retold, especially with an eye to telling it to young people. We as a country need to do a much better job in teaching young people about our nation's history and to do so we need to do more than focus on dates and names and places but on the great stories that convey a sense of who we are as a people. I don't know a better one than the Berlin Airlift but it gets a sentence, or paragraph at the most, in history textbooks. Yet this story not only tells us about our history in stepping onto the world stage and the values it brought with us, it is also a story of individuals triumphing over adversity and rising above their own limitations that has much to teach -- whatever our age.

-- Andrei

About April 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Andrei Cherny in April 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

May 2008 is the next archive.

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