My First Amendment - you have the right to shop online
  In association with Amazon.com
 Location:  Home> Impeachment > United States > A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President  
Categories
Bush Lies
Torture
War Conspiracy
Militarism
Impeachment
Politics
Fundamentalism
All Books
DVD
VHS
Music
Penguins

Penguin 64

Penguin CPU

Penguin Kitchens

Penguin Audio

Penguin Videos

Penguin Cameras

Other Sites

UnFox News

Steve's News

Great Books to Buy

Just Books for Kids

Stop, Shop, Buy Online

the sensible celiac

Celiac Shop

OS X Mart

Boolean Sales

Very Big Bookstore

Cameras and Photo

Books, DVDs, and More

Plenty to Buy

Ultra Mega Mart US

Ultra Mega Mart UK

Ultra Mega Mart Canada

Bookmark this page:
ADD TO DEL.ICIO.US ADD TO DIGG ADD TO FURL ADD TO STUMBLEUPON ADD TO YAHOO MYWEB ADD TO GOOGLE

A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President

A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President
Author: Jeffrey Toobin
Publisher: Touchstone
Category: Book

List Price: $20.00
Buy New: $18.00
You Save: $2.00 (10%)



New (22) Used (42) Collectible (2) from $0.01

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 136 reviews

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1st Touchstone Ed
Pages: 448
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0743204131
Dewey Decimal Number: 973.929092
EAN: 9780743204132
ASIN: 0743204131

Publication Date: October 13, 2000
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President
  • Hardcover - A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President

Similar Items:

  • Too Close to Call: The Thirty-Six-Day Battle to Decide the 2000 Election
  • The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court
  • The Run of His Life : The People versus O.J. Simpson
  • Opening Arguments: A Young Lawyer's First Case: United Statues v. Oliver North
  • The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
What--another book about the messes Bill Clinton got himself into? Well, yes, but with a difference: Jeffrey Toobin's A Vast Conspiracy is the first to provide readers with comprehensive behind-the-scenes details of the machinations of independent counsel Kenneth Starr's team of prosecutors, lawyers for Monica Lewinsky and Paula Jones, and congressional members as the president's "inappropriate relationship" snowballed into the country's first impeachment proceedings in over a century.

Toobin's narrative is one of the most levelheaded versions of the 1998 scandal yet published, although he has very few kind words for anybody involved. "No other major political controversy in American history produced as few heroes as this one," he notes, and "in spite of his consistently reprehensible behavior, Clinton was, by comparison, the good guy in this struggle." While debunking Hillary Rodham Clinton's claims that she and her husband were the victims of a "vast right-wing conspiracy" (a claim that ignores Clinton's responsibility for his actions), Toobin does demonstrate how lawyers for Paula Jones collaborated with Linda Tripp and Lucianne Goldberg to build the most damaging case possible against the president. (He also suggests, not without cause, that Newsweek reporter Michael Isikoff worked more closely with Tripp and Goldberg than he reported in his own book, Uncovering Clinton.)

While for the most part discreetly judgmental, A Vast Conspiracy sometimes borders on cruel in its descriptions of Monica Lewinsky: after describing a 45-minute discussion between Clinton and his sometime sex partner, Toobin comments, "An actual conversation with Lewinsky may have been the thing that cured the president of his infatuation," and then later, "There were few better measures of Tripp's dedication to her book research and Clinton-hating than the simple fact that she tolerated Lewinsky's inane chatter for so long." Yet his portrayal of Lewinsky as "a genuine, if occasional, sexual partner as well as an obsessed, unhinged fan" is, thanks to his rich storytelling abilities, compelling. (Whether it's true remains to be seen; some readers of his previous book, The Run of His Life, believe that Toobin's portrayal of O.J. Simpson seriously underestimated the suspected killer.) And, although it will no doubt get overlooked amidst all the salacious details of the case, Toobin makes a good argument for how the whole brouhaha was an inevitable result of several decades of "legal activism," in which lawsuits were used to achieve broad political changes. Between Richard Posner's musings on the legal aspects of the impeachment hearings in An Affair of State and Toobin's narrative reconstruction of the events leading up to the impeachment, we have the beginnings of a calm consideration of just what exactly happened to American politics during Clinton's second term. --Ron Hogan

Product Description
THE NATIONAL BESTSELLER

It was the most extraordinary public saga of our time, and Jeffrey Toobin gives us a definitive history of the ordeal that very nearly brought down a president. Here is the whole story of the Clinton sex scandals -- from its beginnings in a Little Rock hotel to its climax on the floor of the United States Senate with only the second vote on presidential removal in American history. Rich with Shakespearean characters and dramatic secrets, fueled with the high octane of a sensational legal thriller, and tinged by misguided, outlandish behavior that was played out at the very highest levels, Toobin's A Vast Conspiracy brings a dignity and integrity to this story that it has never before received.

The Clinton sex scandals will shape forever how we think about the signature issues of our day -- sex, privacy, civil rights, and, yes, cigars. A Vast Conspiracy will shape forever how we think about the Clinton scandals.


Customer Reviews:   Read 131 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Mostly Legal   May 11, 2008
Steven Daedalus (Deming, NM USA)
Nobody comes out of this story looking particularly good -- in case there were any doubts. Jeffrey Toobin has carefully gone over the historical and legal issues and can find no one who lacks culpability. Yes, actually, there was a "vast conspiracy" but it was a conspiracy of lawyers more than politicians. The system has changed. Dissatisfied with political arrangements we now try to shape them to our liking by legal means rather than through the political process. If you don't like someone, you smear him, accuse him, try him, and throw him or her out of office instead of waiting for the next election. With lawyers as eager intermediaries, Toobin shows us a "hate Clinton" crowd on the right and Clinton and his advisors on the other. Clinton himself, ignoring advice, acted in such a way as to seem almost actively helping his enemies. Ken Starr, appointed an Independent Counsel with almost unlimited powers in the wake of Richard Nixon's "Saturday Night Massacre", pursued Clinton's history through a real-estate transaction years earlier. He found nothing justiciable and was about to fold, when it was pointed out to him that there was a vague and half-hidden link in his charter that would allow him to switch from Whitewater to Lewinsky. He made the leap without thinking a great deal about it and the result was the pasquinade the whole world saw on television. Toobin feels that everyone involved should be ashamed of himself. I agree.


4 out of 5 stars A great read   January 30, 2007
Bachelier (Ile de France)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Lots of folks have found bias in this book, and I suppose if there is a skew it is ssomewhat favorable towards Clinton, but by no means is this book a Clintonista apologia. I'm somewhere to the right of Vlad the Impaler, and I found it a riveting read and laying out the facts. Toobin does an excellent job of writing an engaging account of a period when the President's pants gripped the nation. You won't be aable to put it down.


5 out of 5 stars Fascinating well researched page turner   December 10, 2003
Boraxo (San Francisco, CA United States)
5 out of 8 found this review helpful

Very objective treatment of the scandals that nearly toppled the Clinton presidency. Hardcore liberals and conservatives may be disappointed, but the rest of us will appreciate Toobin's witty writeup of the hypocrites on both sides. A+++


1 out of 5 stars Yawn....   September 5, 2002
6 out of 63 found this review helpful

What this clown calls a 'vast right wing conspiracy' is, in reality, 'the opposition'. When Mr. Zipper attributed the OK City bombing to right wing talk radio, he earned every diatribe ever thrown at him times a million.


5 out of 5 stars A classic in the making   January 22, 2002
Carl Hoffman (Cleveland Heights,, OH United States)
25 out of 30 found this review helpful

I suspect A VAST CONSPIRACY will become one of the classic acounts of the Clinton impeachment scandal. Toobin distinguishes himself with thoroughness, factual clarity, and analytical even-handedness. He is willing to dissect and criticize both sides. His conclusion--that the Constitution-shredding rage of Clinton's attackers trumped the president's tawdry adultery and lying--is spot-on, lights out, dead-solid perfect.

High points include a lucid first chapter that outlines Toobin's themes; fine thumbnail sketches of the personalities involved; and dramatic recreations of key events, like the interrogation of Monica Lewinsky and former Senator Dale Bumpers' address to the Senate at the climax of the trial. Toobin sees America's post-World War II tendency to settle political questions through court decisions as the major cause of the impeachment. Analyzing this tendency, he demonstrates his even-handedness by noting that it started with left-wing operatives like those in the civil rights and environmental movements, but that right-wing activists eventually used the same tactics to try to nullify the 1996 election of Bill Clinton. Toobin also points out how the thinking of feminists and the Christian right--usually bitter political enemies--converged in the "character" issue. This, in turn, provided cover for ratings-hungry media outlets eager to investigate the private lives of those in power. Although Toobin occasionally resorts to irony or even sarcasm, he never succumbs to the breathless vituperation of so many in the anti-Clinton camp ...

But I do agree with another reviewer that Toobin might have devoted more space to the media's role in creating and sustaining the scandal. It was absolutely vital. From swarming talk show hosts to stars of network news organizations, media figures did more than their share to keep the story going, despite the fact that 2/3 of the American people never though the crimes warranted the proposed punishment. (And, after a year-plus of all-Monica-all-the-time, I'm never again going to be able to hear the phrase "liberal media bias" without laughing.)

What most troubles me about the impeachment is that the same thing could happen again. There's now a template: a minority who never accepted the legitimacy of Clinton's election victories skillfully and ruthlessly exploited media and the courts to sidetrack the entire country for more than a year. A VAST CONSPIRACY shows the fatuousness of many of their claims. For instance, the five investigations of the death of Vincent Foster by agencies ranging from the FBI to the Starr commission came to verdicts of suicide, suicide, suicide, suicide, and suicide. But to this day, many Clinton-haters insist the president and/or his wife murdered Foster, then perpetrated a nefarious cover-up. I have no doubt that if Gore had been president on September 11, 2001, we'd already be deep into investigations and speculation about impeachment.

Well-organized ideologues of the extreme right are far more numerous and single-minded than their left-wing bogeymen. I fear they'll use the same techniques to go after the next Democrat who dares to get elected president.

Until then, many thanks to Jeffrey Toobin, and five well-earned stars for this excellent book.