Lindbergh
Lindbergh book cover

Lindbergh

Paperback – September 1, 1999

Price
$21.11
Format
Paperback
Pages
688
Publisher
Berkley
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0425170410
Dimensions
6.02 x 1.5 x 9 inches
Weight
1.6 pounds

Description

Praise for Lindbergh “The definitive account of a dramatic and disturbing American story...One of the most important biographies of the decade...an extraordinary achievement.”— Los Angeles Times Book Review “A magisterial work...a superb job...With Berg's free access to previously unavailable documentation, this is sure to be the definitive biography of Lindbergh.”— Kirkus Reviews (starred review)“Berg's biography [is] sure to renew interest in this unique American hero.”— People Magazine“In Lindbergh , A. Scott Berg brings us about as close as I suspect we ever will get to the man himself. The first biographer to be granted unfettered access to Lindbergh's private papers, Berg provides enough fresh detail to trace the roots of Lindbergh's personality, its strengths as well as its maddening flaws, all the way back to his turbulent boyhood.”— The New York Times Book Review “A biography that will be one of the publishing events of the year...one of the most extraordinary lives of the 20th century.”— Vanity Fair “Fanatically researched and very moving...stunning in its fairness to a harsh and unknowable Charlesxa0 Lindbergh.”— Esquire “A comprehensive and invaluable text.”— The Washington Post Book World “The most outstanding piece of nonfiction that I have read this year...Berg does a spectacular job of establishing why Lindbergh proves such a powerful icon for the 20th century...A substantial piece of history that illuminates an important figure...It's the kind of book that took almost a decade to create. And it's worth it.”— USA Today A. Scott Berg is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of five biographies: Max Perkins: Editor of Genius , winner of the National Book Award; Goldwyn , for which he received a Guggenheim Fellowship; Lindbergh , winner of the Pulitzer Prize; Kate Remembered , his biographical memoir of Katharine Hepburn; and Wilson , the definitive biography of twenty-eighth president Woodrow Wilson. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Karma " ...living in dreams of yesterday, we find ourselves still dreaming of impossible future conquests... "-C.A.L. For more than a day the world held its breath...and then the small plane was sighted over Ireland. Twenty-seven hours after he had left Roosevelt Field in New York—alone, in the Spirit of St. Louis —word quickly spread from continent to continent that Charles A. Lindbergh had survived the most perilous leg of his journey—the fifteen-hour crossing of the Atlantic. He had to endure but a few more hours before reaching his destination, Paris. Anxiety yielded to anticipation. The American Ambassador to France, Myron T. Herrick, went to St. Cloud after lunch that Saturday to watch the Franco-American team-tennis matches. When he took his seat in the front row, five thousand fans cheered. During the course of the afternoon, people in the stands heard newsboys shouting the headlines of their éditions spéciales, announcing Lindbergh's expected arrival that night. In the middle of the match, Herrick received a telegram—confirmation that Lindbergh had passed over Valencia in Ireland. All eyes were on the Ambassador as he hastily left courtside, convincing most of the spectators that their prayers were being answered. Before the match had ended, the stands began to empty. Herrick rushed back to his residence in Paris, ate a quick dinner at 6:30, then left for the airfield at Le Bourget, to the northeast of the city. "It was a good thing we did not delay another quarter of an hour," Herrick recalled, "for crowds were already collecting along the road and in a short time passage was almost impossible." The boulevards were jammed with cars ten abreast. Passengers poked their heads through the sliding roof panels of the Parisian taxis, greeting each other in jubilation. "Everyone had acquired a bottle of something and, inasmuch as the traffic moved very slowly," one reveler recalled of that night in 1927, "bottles were passed from cab to cab celebrating the earthshaking achievement." A mile from the airfield, the flow of traffic came to a standstill. Once the radio announced that Lindbergh had flown over southern England, mobs formed in the heart of Paris. Thirty thousand people flocked toward the Place de l'Opéra, where illuminated advertising signs flashed news bulletins. Over the next few hours, the crowds spilled into the Boulevard Poissonière—until it became unpassable—where they expected to find the most reliable accounts of Lindbergh's progress posted in front of the Paris Matin offices. "Not since the armistice of 1918," observed one reporter, "has Paris witnessed a downright demonstration of popular enthusiasm and excitement equal to that displayed by the throngs flocking to the boulevards for news of the American flier, whose personality has captured the hearts of the Parisian multitude." Between updates, people waited in anxious silence. Two French fliers—Nungesser and Coli—had not been heard from in the two weeks since their attempt to fly nonstop from Paris to New York; and their disappearance weighed heavily on the Parisians' minds. Many muttered about the impossibility of accomplishing a nonstop transatlantic crossing, especially alone. Periodically, whispers rustled through the crowd, rumors that Lindbergh had been forced down. After a long silence, a Frenchwoman, dressed in mourning and sitting in a big limousine, wiped away tears of worry. Another woman, selling newspapers, approached her, fighting back her own tears. "You're right to feel so, madame," she said. "In such things there is no nationality—he's some mother's son." Close to nine o'clock, letters four feet tall flashed onto one of the advertising boards. "The crowds grew still, the waiters frozen in place between the café tables," one witness remembered. "All were watching. Traffic stopped. Then came the cheering message 'Lindbergh sighted over Cherbourg and the coast of Normandy.' " The crowd burst into bravos. Strangers patted each other on the back and shook hands. Moments later, Paris Matin posted a bulletin in front of its building, confirming the sighting; and bystanders chanted " Vive Lindbergh! " and " Vive I'Américain! " The next hour brought more good news from Deauville, and then Louviers. New arrivals onto the scene all asked the same question: " Est-il arrivé? " Fifteen thousand others gravitated toward the Étoile, filling the city block that surrounded a hotel because they assumed Lindbergh would be spending the night there. Many too impatient to stand around in town suddenly decided to witness the arrival. Students from the Sorbonne jammed into buses and subways. Thousands more grabbed whatever conveyance remained available, until more than ten thousand cars filled the roads between the city and Le Bourget. Before long, 150,000 people had gathered at the airfield. A little before ten o'clock, the excited crowd at Le Bourget heard an approaching engine and fell silent. A plane burst through the clouds and landed; but it turned out to be the London Express. Minutes later, as a cool wind blew the stars into view, another roar ripped the air, this time a plane from Strasbourg. Red and gold and green rockets flared overhead, while acetylene searchlights scanned the dark sky. The crowd became restless standing in the chill. Then, "suddenly unmistakably the sound of an aeroplane...and then to our left a white flash against the black night...and another flash (like a shark darting through water)," recalled Harry Crosby—the American expatriate publisher—who was among the enthusiastic onlookers. "Then nothing. No sound. Suspense. And again a sound, this time somewhere off towards the right. And is it some belated plane or is it Lindbergh? Then sharp swift in the gold glare of the searchlights a small white hawk of a plane swoops hawk-like down and across the field—C'est lui Lindbergh. LINDBERGH!" On May 21, 1927, at 10:24 P.M., the Spirit of St. Louis landed—having flown 3,614 miles from New York, nonstop, in thirty-three hours, thirty minutes, and thirty seconds. And in that instant, everything changed—for both the pilot and the planet. There was no holding the one hundred fifty thousand people back. Looking out the side of his plane and into the glare of lights, Lindbergh could see only that the entire field ahead was "covered with running figures!" With decades of hindsight, the woman Lindbergh would marry came to understand what that melee actually signified. "Fame—Opportunity—Wealth—and also tragedy & loneliness & frustration rushed at him in those running figures on the field at Le Bourget," she would later write. "And he is so innocent & unaware." Lindbergh's arrival in Paris became the defining moment of his life, that event on which all his future actions hinged—as though they were but a predestined series of equal but opposite reactions, fraught with irony. Just as inevitable, every event in Lindbergh's first twenty-five years seemed to have conspired in propelling him to Paris that night. As the only child of woefully ill-matched parents, he had tuned out years of discord by withdrawing. He had emerged from his itinerant and isolated adolescence virtually friendless and self-absorbed. A scion of resourceful immigrants, he had grown up a practical dreamer, believing there was nothing he could not do. A distracted student, he had dropped out of college to learn to fly airplanes; and after indulging in the footloose life of barnstorming, he had been drawn to the military. The Army had not only improved his aviation skills but also brought precision to his thinking. He had left the air corps to fly one of the first airmail routes, subjecting himself to some of the roughest weather in the country. Restless, he had lusted for greater challenges, for adventure. In the spring of 1927, Lindbergh had been too consumed by what he called "the single objective of landing my plane at Paris" to have considered its aftermath. "To plan beyond that had seemed an act of arrogance I could not afford," he would later write. Even if he had thought farther ahead, however, he could never have predicted the unprecedented global response to his arrival. By that year, radio, telephones, radiographs, and the Bartlane Cable Process could transmit images and voices around the world within seconds. What was more, motion pictures had just mastered the synchronization of sound, allowing dramatic moments to be preserved in all their glory and distributed worldwide. For the first time all of civilization could share as one the sights and sounds of an event—almost instantaneously and simultaneously. And in this unusually good-looking, young aviator—of apparently impeccable character—the new technology found its first superstar. The reception in Paris was only a harbinger of the unprecedented worship people would pay Lindbergh for years. Without either belittling or aggrandizing the importance of his flight, he considered it part of the continuum of human endeavor, and that he was, after all, only a man. The public saw more than that. Indeed, Harry Crosby felt that the stampede at Le Bourget that night represented nothing less than the start of a new religious movement—"as if all the hands in the world are...trying to touch the new Christ and that the new Cross is the Plane." Universally admired, Charles Lindbergh became the most celebrated living person ever to walk the earth. For several years Lindbergh had lived according to one of the basic laws of aerodynamics—the need to maintain balance. And so, in those figures running toward him, Lindbergh immediately saw inevitable repercussions. At first he feared for his physical safety; over the next few months he worried about his soul. He instinctively knew that submitting himself to the idolatry of the public could strip him of his very identity; and the only preventive he could see was to maintain his privacy. That reluctance to offer himself to the public only increased its desire to possess him—the first of many paradoxes he would encounter in his lifelong effort to restore equilibrium to his world. "No man before me had commanded such freedom of movement over earth," Lindbergh would write of his historic flight. Ironically, that freedom would be denied him thereafter on land. Both whetting and sating the public's appetite for every morsel about him, the press broke every rule of professional ethics in covering Lindbergh. They often ran with unverified stories, sometimes stories they had made up, transforming him into a character worthy of the Arabian Nights. Reporters stalked him constantly—almost fatally on several occasions—making him their first human quarry, stripping him of his rights to privacy as no public figure had ever been before. Over the century, others would reach this new stratum of celebrity. The unwanted fame all but guaranteed an isolated adulthood. And, indeed, Lindbergh spent the rest of his life in flight, searching for islands of tranquility. Early on, he was was lucky enough to meet Anne Morrow, Ambassador Dwight Morrow's shy daughter, who craved solitude as much as he did. They fell in love and married. Their "storybook romance," as the press always presented it, was, in fact, a complex case history of control and repression, filled with joy and passion and grief and rage. He scourged his wife into becoming an independent woman; and, in so doing, he helped create an important feminist voice—a popular diarist who also wrote one of the most beloved volumes of the century, and another that was one of the most despised. The Lindberghs' love story had a tragic second act. His fame and wealth cost them their firstborn child. Under melodramatic conditions, Lindbergh authorized payment of a large ransom to a mysterious man in a graveyard; but he did not get his son in return. The subsequent investigation of the kidnapping uncovered only circumstantial evidence; and the man accused of killing "the Lindbergh Baby" never confessed—thus condemning the "Crime of the Century" to eternal debate. Because the victim's father was so celebrated, the case entered the annals of history, and laws were changed in Lindbergh's name. The media circus that accompanied what veteran courtwatchers still refer to as the "Trial of the Century" forever affected trial coverage in the United States. The subsequent flood of sympathy for Lindbergh only enhanced his public profile, making him further prey for the media as well as other criminals and maniacs. In fear and disgust, he moved to Europe, where for a time he became one of America's most effective unofficial ambassadors. Several visits to Germany in the 1930s—during which he inspected the Luftwaffe and also received a medal from Hitler—called his politics into question. He returned to the United States to warn the nation of Germany's insuperable strength in the impending European war, then to spearhead the American isolationist movement. As the leading spokesman for the controversial organization known as America First, he preached his beliefs with messianic fervor, incurring the wrath of many, including President Franklin D. Roosevelt. By December 7, 1941, many Americans considered him nothing short of satanic—not just a defeatist but an anti-Semitic, pro-Nazi traitor. Lindbergh had spent most of his adult life establishing the role of aviation in war and peace, proving himself one of the prime movers in the aviation industry. But because of his noninterventionist stance, Roosevelt refused to allow Lindbergh to fly after Pearl Harbor with the very air force he had helped modernize. He found other ways to serve. As a test pilot in private industry, he developed techniques that increased both the altitude and range of several planes in America's fleet, saving countless lives. The military looked the other way as Lindbergh insisted on engaging in combat missions in the South Pacific; but his failure to condemn Nazi Germany before World War II haunted his reputation for the rest of his life. One of his greatest services to his country proved to be in helping launch the space program. As the first American airman to exhibit "the right stuff," Lindbergh inspired his country's first astronauts by sheer example. But more than that, he was—unknown to the public—the man most responsible for securing the funding that underwrote the research of Dr. Robert H. Goddard, the inventor of the modern rocket. A friend of the first man to fly an airplane, Lindbergh lived long enough in a fast-moving world to befriend the first man to walk on the moon. In time, Lindbergh came to believe the long-range effects of his flight to Paris were more harmful than beneficial. As civilization encroached upon wilderness in the world he helped shrink, he turned his back on aviation and fought to protect the environment. He rededicated his life to rescuing nearly extinct animals and to preserving wilderness areas. For years this college dropout advanced other sciences as well, performing medical research that would help make organ transplants possible. He made extraordinary archaeological and anthropological discoveries as well. A foundation would later be established in Lindbergh's name that offers grants of $10,580—the cost of the Spirit of St. Louis —for projects that further his vision of "balance between technological advancement and preservation of our human and natural environment." Lindbergh believed all the elements of the earth and heavens are connected, through space and time. The configurations of molecules in each moment help create the next. Thus he considered his defining moment just another step in the development of aviation and exploration—a summit built on all those that preceded it and a springboard to all those that would follow. Only by looking back, Lindbergh believed, could mankind move forward. "In some future incarnation from our life stream," he wrote in later years, "we may understand the reason for our existence in forms of earthly life." In few people were the souls of one's forbears so apparent as they were in Charles Lindbergh. As a result of this transmigration, Lindbergh believed the flight that ended at Le Bourget one night in May 1927 originated much farther back than thirty-three and a half hours prior at Roosevelt Field. It started with some Norsemen—infused with Viking spirit—generations long before that. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Even after twenty years, A. Scott Berg’s Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Charles Lindberg remains “the definitive account” of one of the 20th century’s most extraordinary figures.
  • Few American icons provoke more enduring fascination than Charles Lindbergh—renowned for his one-man transatlantic flight in 1927, remembered for the sorrow surrounding the kidnapping and death of his firstborn son in 1932, and reviled by many for his opposition to America's entry into World War II. Lindbergh's is “a dramatic and disturbing American story,” says the *
  • Los Angeles Times Book Review
  • , and this biography—the first to be written with unrestricted access to the Lindbergh archives and extensive interviews of his friends, colleagues, and close family members—is “a thorough, level-headed evaluation of the glories, tragedies, and often infuriating complexities of this extraordinary life” (
  • Newsday
  • ).

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Absorbing book about a man of contradictions

Say the name "Lindbergh" and it's likely that one of two things immediately come to mind: that Charles Lindbergh was the first man to cross the Atlantic Ocean in an airplane or that he was the famous flier who's baby was kidnapped in what was once known as the "crime of the century." Both of these facts reflect what Charles Lindbergh is best remembered for today but for most of us, time has erased the significant, and in some cases, equally important details of this extraordinary American's life.

In this fine (but necessarily incomplete--more on that later) biography by A. Scott Berg, the modern reader is transported back to the beginning of the 20th century when aviation was still in its infancy, hazardous and somewhat miraculous. Berg naturally begins with Lindy's upbringing in Minnesota where the staunchly midwestern values imparted to him as a child and young man would form the principles of modesty, humbleness, practicality and stoicism that guided him for much of his adult life. A relatively poor student with middling academic talents, Lindbergh found his calling in mechanical interests that eventually led him to aviation. Never completing a college degree, he instead pursued a career as an air mail and stunt show pilot, eventually becoming enthralled with the challenge of the Orteig Prize offered for the first successful crossing of the Atlantic by plane.

The story of the Atlantic crossing by a solitary 25 year old pilot is, of course, dramatic and interesting in itself, but of greater significance to Lindbergh was the life-altering impact that the crossing would have on his life. Upon landing in Le Bourget, France, he was immediately subjected to a level of celebrity, stardom and public adoration that is even now, in the media-saturated 21st century, difficult to imagine. The relentless attention and hounding of the press that scrutinized his every move thereafter bred a deep resentment within in Lindbergh that would last for the rest of his life. Given the descriptions of media scum-baggery chronicled in the book, including completely fabricated stories, bogus quotations, stalking and worse, it's easy enough to understand.

While this is a biography of Charles Lindbergh, it's quite nearly a biography of his wife as well. Anne Morrow, daughter to a wealthy family whose patriarch was serving as the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico at the time of her marriage to Lindbergh features prominently throughout the book as his steadfast partner, first in glamorous flying adventures around the world and later as fellow parent to six children, one of whom would be killed during a botched kidnapping and ransom scheme. The media circus surrounding the trial of perpetrator Bruno Hauptmann would further cement Lindbergh's disgust with the American press. Following the trial and unwilling to bear the continued pressures of living in a fish bowl of publicity, he and Anne would flee to England for several years to raise their second son.

Lindbergh remained a prominent figure in American public life long after his youthful conquest of the Atlantic, often to his detriment. His first public feud was with none other than president Franklin D. Roosevelt whom he took to task for summarily ending government contracts with private firms hired to deliver air mail throughout the country. FDR thought the contracts were won through shady, possibly illegal dealings. Lindbergh, in one of his earliest stands on principle, argued that not only were the contracts won fairly but that the use of inexperienced Army pilots in the place of veteran air mail carriers was the direct cause of pilot deaths, a claim well borne out by the alarming fatality statistics among the replacement pilots. Lindbergh would become persona non grata to FDR forever after.

The far more damaging public dispute would come in the form of the "Great Debate" in which Lindbergh took a firm stand for isolationism in the period preceding World War II. While it's largely forgotten now, prior to the bombing of Pearl harbor by the Japanese, many Americans, chastened by the experience of World War I and eager to avoid further European adventures, supported the view that the war was not in the country's best interests. Given his star power, Lindbergh became the public face of what was known as the "America First" movement. Not only did it further damage his standing with the U.S. administration (especially when he resigned his officer's commission to protest what he saw as FDR's war propaganda), it also significantly tarnished his previously heroic reputation with large swaths of the public ("from Jesus to Judas" as his wife would record). During this time, Lindbergh was especially damaged by his previous trip to Germany while working for the U.S. military to gain intelligence on the Luftwaffe, one of many such trips he would make to europe on behalf of the Army. While there, he received a medal from Hermann Goering and while the bestowment of medals in such diplomatic meetings was routine, this event would never be forgotten by the American people. Lindbergh further damaged himself by refusing to later return the medal.

Taken out of context, a few of his statements suggested to some that he supported the Nazi regime. While his true beliefs were largely misrepresented and misinterpreted in the press, he would be thought an anti-semitic racist for many years afterward. It's clear from Berg's detailed review of this period that Lindbergh, while strangely avoiding public criticism of the brutal aspects of Nazi government, was neither a supporter of fascism nor a Nazi-sympathizer. Rather, he appears to have been extremely naive about America's ability to avoid involvement in another European war...and extremely stubborn about ever backing down from that position. When the Pearl Harbor attack eventually came, he threw his full backing behind the national war effort. Because of his earlier political position, he was unacceptable as an officer but he found other ways of serving, going so far as to "secretly" fly combat missions in the Pacific while officially categorized as an "observer."

In his post-war life, his reputation was rehabilitated. Following FDR's death, and as war fever subsided, he returned to the good graces of the federal government, becoming a valued consultant to the newly-formed Strategic Air Command. In fact, he was so trusted, that he had full security clearance including access to materials considered "Top Secret."

In his later life, horrified by the prospect of nuclear war with the Soviet Union, he grew wary of mankind's relationship to technology. Once a pioneer of aviation and a staunch proponent of its advancement, he began to seriously question whether easy air travel and advanced technologies were advancing humanity's cause or simply hastening its destruction. His personal awakening in the 1960s coincided with that of many of his countrymen. He would spend his later years on exotic expeditions to some of the mos tremote locations of the earth, meeting with tribes that time had forgotten and speaking out on their behalf with local governments who had the power to save their way of life. His pleas often resulted in tangible legislation that helped preserve isolated peoples and endangered animal species.

Now for the problem with this biography...the 800 pound gorilla between the pages. It was written in the late 90s just prior to the stunning revelations that Lindbergh, while described as an imperfect though caring father as well as a loving but absentee husband who suffered from a perpetual wanderlust, had actually fathered an astonishing seven additional children with three different German women during those periods of "wanderlust." Berg, working only from what was publicly known about Lindbergh at the time, casts him as an imperfect but morally upstanding man with a firm commitment to high standards. While appearing to model them himself and demanding the same from those around him, we now know that Lindbergh was in fact an enormous hypocrite, shattering many of the theses of Berg's otherwise excellent book. How can these two Charles Lindberghs be reconciled? Only a future biography can help us answer that question.
40 people found this helpful
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Doesn't mention his illegitimate children

This book is extremely readable, which is why everyone gives it 5 stars. But it fails to mention the fact that Lindbergh fathered at least 3 illegitimate children in Germany in the late 50's-60's. In 2003, 3 German siblings took a DNA test vs. one of Lindbergh's legitimate grandchildren and paternity was proved. Lindbergh kept their mother as a '2d family,' and he possibly fathered others. This book was extremely well-researched, so I can't see how Scott Berg can continue to sell this book without an update that talks about this.
34 people found this helpful
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Lucky Lindy? - You Be The Judge

So how did a farm boy from the backwoods of Minnesota become one of the most revered heroes in world history?
Perhaps no book written about the ice-veined, brilliant aviator Charles A. Lindbergh answers this question better than A. Scott Berg's "Lindbergh", a marvelous, smoothly-written biography that uses heretofore unavailable sources to chronicle the unimaginable ups and equally unimaginable downs of Mr. Lindbergh's life.
The book is the first biography of Lindbergh that was written with the input and blessing of Lindbergh's family, including his widow, the noted author Anne Morrow Lindbergh. For the first time, the family granted unrestricted access to masses of material in the Lindbergh archives.
After reading this book, one concludes that two extreme forces shaped this great man's destiny.
The first was flight, taking off with his days as a barnstormer and airmail pilot, soaring with his courageous solo in a monoplane across the Atlantic, and coming to a soft but significant landing with the endeavors of his later life that involved not only aviation, but innovative projects in the fields of medicine and environmentalism. He also distinguished himself as an author (with, I suspect, the assistance of his wife, Anne, herself a talented writer.) In 1954, "The Spirit of St. Louis" the book won the Pulitzer Prize. It remains one of this country's most compelling, true-life adventure stories.
The second force was fame, the scourge of this extremely private man's life. Keep in mind that this was no normal fame, but a fame that bordered on fanaticism. It was fame that directly related to the kidnapping and death of his infant son, the family's exile to Europe, and the scorching criticism directed Lindbergh's way for his anti-war stance in the years preceding World War 11.
And although Mr. Berg's book was written with the cooperation of the Lindbergh family, it doesn't gloss over the consequences of his remote personality and long absences from home. Both had much to do with Anne Morrow Lindbergh's love affair with her doctor.

Some day, I hope that an ambitious television network such as HBO creates a mini-series based on this captivating biography. There is no way that a single movie can do justice to the expanse of dramatic events and stunning accomplishments that made up the life of America's greatest hero.
Here was a man. And here's a biography that does him proud.
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Unsure

I have mixed feelings about this book. On the positive side, it provides a very thorough and detailed account of Lindbergh's life, and is in no way boring like some biographies. However, I am not sure whether to trust this author's objectivity. Berg drew heavily from the Lindbergh family itself for his sources, and although a viable source, he relied to heavily on it. This gives the book the tendency to be slightly and in some case grossly biased towards its view of Lindbergh's actions. Although his exploits in flying were in every way brave, his actions and words regarding American involvement in the 2nd World War and his view of Nazi Germany reflect very porrly on his judgment. He also seemed somewhat indifferent to attrocities committed by the Axis nations. Read the book, but keep an open mind to the subject.
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A Lonely Life for the Lone Eagle

To this baby-boomer growing up, Charles A. Lindbergh was a shadowy hero about whom little was known. We knew of his heroic flight across the Atlantic in 1927 and the tragic kidnapping and murder of his son a few years later. As time went on I came to know that there was some controversy about his stand in the years leading up to World War II. Occasionally a magazine article would associate his name with some environmental cause, but the human being remained in the shadows of the spectacular dash across the Atlantic. In this biography, A. Scott Berg brings the man, his times, what the world would make him and the ways he influenced the world all to life. The book does even more than that, for it gives us a biography, not only of Charles, but also of his wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh.

The book starts with the family background of Charles A. Lindbergh. The grandson of a prominent member of the Swedish Riksdag and son of a Progressive Minnesota Congressman, Lindbergh was no stranger to the public forums into which he would later delve. Both his father and grandfather would fall from political favor and seek a modicum of success in regions far from their political bases. Lindbergh actually got much of his familial support from his maternal family, based in Detroit. His parents marriage would long exist in name only, a trait which would bear some comparison to Charles and Anne's marriage.

Throughout the book, Berg makes the reader clearly aware of the contrasts in Lindbergh's life. Although the son of a former Congressman who might be expected to have the support of establishment figures, Lindbergh undertook the Trans-Atlantic flight with the credentials of a Midwestern mail pilot, who had primarily flown routes in Missouri and Illinois. Before the Trans-Atlantic flight he was far from being considered one of America's prominent aviators. Although seemingly flying out of the mists onto the world stage, he was to become a prominent force in American corporate and public policy debates for the rest of his life.

With touchdown in Paris, everything changed for Lindbergh. He became an instant celebrity on a scale the world had never seen before or since. The press would hound his every movement for years. This provided Lindbergh with both an opportunity and a curse. He suddenly became accepted as an expert on any subject on which he might choose to express an opinion. He used his new persona to promote the causes in which he believed. At the same time his life became a constant struggle to preserve some degree of privacy and normalcy for himself and his family.
Lindbergh's first passion was to promote aviation. For several year she devoted his energies, both through personal appearances and through corporate and governmental positions, to the advancement of aviation throughout the world. It was during this period that the tragic death of his first son, Charles, Jr., occurred.

As the clouds of war arose over Europe, Lindbergh devoted himself to the crusade to keep America out of war, serving as the most prominent member of the America First movement. As Berg points out, Lindbergh was, as were many of his time, motivated, less by a fear of Nazism, than by a fear of Communism. Lindbergh's main argument was that the greatest tragedy for Western Civilization in general, and the United States in particular, was the establishment of Soviet hegemony over Europe. He felt that the West needed Germany as a bulwark against Asiatic Russia. He felt that Germany, based as it was in the Western tradition, would moderate its extremist tendencies more quickly than would the Soviet Union, steeped in its autocratic antecedents. The history of the 50 years following the triumph of the Soviet Union over Germany goes far toward justifying Lindbergh's fears. Lindbergh's involvement in national politics and international affairs made turned Lindbergh from the international hero to national pariah. Never again would his public acceptance be what it had been prior to 1940.

Throughout his career, Lindbergh dabbled in medical and scientific experiments, culminating in his rather gadfly involvement in the environmental movement.
During these years, the Lindbergh marriage was blown by the personalities of Charles and Anne as well as the currents the world circulated around them. The financial independence resulting from Charles' notoriety and Anne's inheritance permitted each of them to undertake projects without the obligation to commit to a stable lifestyle. For Charles this meant the freedom to come and go, largely as he pleased, in order to promote the causes to which he was devoted at the time. This left Anne, who made her own mark as an aviator and a writer, to provide much of the domestic support for the children, often without knowing when Charles would leave or return. Although Berg presents Charles as having an affection for, interest in and influence over his children, the reader is left with the impression of Charles and Anne as filling more the roles of "married singles" rather than functioning as a mutually supportive partnership.

Overall this is an excellent book. The reader is left with an understanding for the world in which Charles Lindbergh lived and acted. The development of aviation is seen through the report of his actions. The story of an important segment of public opinion on the European situation leading up to World War II is well explained. The postwar Lindbergh, bouncing from project to project without any apparent driving force brings the book to its conclusion. It is an excellent portrayal of an extraordinary life.
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Berg Blew It--Didn't Unearth "Lucky" Lindy's 3 "Secret" German Families

One problem with trumpeting exclusive, close access to "the family" in writing an authorized, sympathetic "biography" is that the writer can be fooled, or fool himself, into thinking that's all there is.

How embarrassing for Berg, and fatal to his book's trustworthiness, that he wrote absolutely nothing about Lindbergh's three "secret" German families. As the wealth of information--letters, interviews, genetic testing, Lindbergh's deathbed instructions--all conclusively attest, he fathered seven children by three German women and maintained with each family facades...and fathered five children with Anne. Just do an internet search for "Lindbergh secret families"...

Some sleuth, this Berg.

Berg's books on Goldwyn and Perkins were great. His intimate sketch of Katherine Hepburn at least didn't pretend to be a serious and complete biography.

Yesterday's announcement that Berg's long-awaited biography of Woodrow Wilson--12 years in the making--would finally appear this Fall is exciting.

Keep fingers crossed he didn't wear rose-colored glasses in preparing it.

We await an accurate, justly analytical and complete professional biography of Lindbergh. Meanwhile, pass this one up if you're shopping.
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A wonderful chronicle of Lindbergh and the 20th century

At first I was intimidated by the size of the book. I was curious about Charles Lindbergh but doubted my curiosity would last past 250 pages. One day I happened to catch C-SPAN and A. Scott Berg appeared as a guest of some book fair. He seemed so passionate about Lindberg that I realized if his book contained a fraction of his passion it would be well worth the read - over 600 pages.
It was a gamble I'm glad I took. Berg's book is an epic saga of a man caught in the convulsions of the 20th century. I'm impressed by the research he has undertaken to write the book. I am also equally impressed by the clarity of Berg's story-telling technique.
I finished the booked feeling as that history was alive and personal - that we are all participants in the history of our making and unmaking.
Best of all, Berg lets readers come to their own conclusions about Lindberg, the man, the hero, the historical figure.
An excellent read.
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What a fascinating man was Lindbergh....

I don't generally read biographies. I don't have too many of them on my shelves, and usually they don't catch my eye when I go to the local Barnes & Noble. But for some reason, A. Scott Berg's biography of Charles Lindbergh jumped out at me when I saw it a few months ago. Maybe it was the little blurb on the cover that this book had won the Pulitzer. Maybe it was the additional blurb that this was a New York Times bestseller. I don't know what it was, but I bought the book.
Turns out it was the best thing I ever did.
Of course I knew about the main points of Lindbergh's life - the first man to fly from New York to Paris, and the awful episode of "the Lindbergh baby" kidnapping and murder. I also had some knowledge of Lindbergh's later reputation - he was seen by some as a Nazi sympathizer, or worse.
Berg gives the facts behind these points, and also behind the rest of Lindbergh's life. He does so with an incredible style and in great detail - but not so much detail as to bog down the reader and prevent him or her from finding out about the fascinating man that Charles Lindbergh was. And he was fascinating - there's no other word for it.
The only other phrase that comes to mind to describe Lindbergh is "a mass of contradictions". Berg describes all of those contradictions without detracting from his life in any way. The most important contradiction(s) in this story is Lindbergh's feelings toward his wife.
I could go on and on about this book and the way Berg wrote it. The best recommendation I can give you is that I urge you to pick it up and read it yourself.
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A myopic history of Lindbergh

I find it interesting that if you are reading Scott Berg's "Lindbergh", alongside a biography (there are dozens) of Amelia Earhart, you are faced with the dilemma of reading of two early aviation heroes, whose authors are divided into two
incredibly opposing factions, with one faction bothering to find the truth, and the
other preferring not to get involved with truth. Let's start with Amelia Earhart,
America's 2nd aviation hero, known as "Lady Lindy" after she soloed the Atlantic,
five years, practically to the day, of Charles Lindbergh's signature achievement.
I have 22 books by or about Amelia. Only 7 of them choose to discuss the real
story of what happened to her: The Navy hiring her to spy on the Japanese, to
pay for her second Electra, after she ground-looped the first one in Honolulu, on
what proved to be her next-to final flight; her capture by the Japanese, and her
imprisonment on Saipan during the whole of World War II, and her execution by
her captors in June of 1944, just as the U.S. Navy invaded Saipan. The other
15 books, and the 2 extant Hollywood films (Hillary Swank's "Amelia", and
Diane Keaton's "The Final Flight") choose to entirely ignore the real truth
of Amelia's demise, mostly because The U.S. State Department and the Navy
have the actual story still locked-up in an "eyes-only", ultra top-secret file in
the Pentagon, unavailable to any researcher, even after seventy-four years!
Now, Let's go into Scott Berg's version of America's first aviation hero. Instead of comparing him with the many other Lindbergh authors, let's just zero-in on what he chooses to tell about Lindy, and what he chooses to leave out. Other than his well-told version of the first flight, which was, of course, Lindy's crowning achievement, Berg treats the infamous kidnapping of the Lindbergh child, with an ignorance now shockingly inaccurate to the actual happenings, with the mishandling of the German, Bruno Hauptman's "involvement" and his subsequent execution. Lindbergh's own involvement in the "kidnapping", is now known as a pretty
sure thing. Berg also fails to mention any of Lindy's rampant anti-Semitism,
his sympathy and attraction to Hitler and all things German. Lindy was
actually awarded and accepted an important Nazi medal from none-other than
Herman Goering, head of the Luftwaffe. Berg doesn't mention that, or even
bother to mention his 3 illegitimate children with 2 German women. He fails
to mention that Lindy, and his wife Anne were actually house-hunting in Nazi
Germany, and were personally present at the notorious Kristalnacht (The night
of broken glass) in Nazi Germany and Austria, in 1938, and Lindy, a known
sympathizer, famously, never repudiated the Nazi atrocities that led from there to
to the Holocaust. Lindy's sympathies were huge and reviled in the American
press, and Berg chooses not to mention it. Writers of biography are of two
camps. One, which thoroughly investigates and researches his subject,
warts and all, and tells a complete, un-biased history. The other approaches
his subject with perhaps some pre-formed hero-worship, instead of an open
mind, and comes to a final conclusion which presents a biased version of what
they expect of their subject, and reveal an incomplete version of his secrets
and character, in an ostrich-like manner, head-in-sand, hoping no one will notice.
Well, that's my opinion, and I'm stuck with it..... Bryan Sheedy
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Well Written Profile of a Brilliant yet Disturbing Man, Probably Due For an Update

A. Scott Berg does a good job in Lindbergh. It is interesting, informative, and keeps you turning the pages. He was granted access to sources by the Lindbergh family, including original access to the diaries of Anne Morrow Lindbergh. This access helps the story in that it fills in much of the blanks of the life of the intensely private Charles Lindbergh, but it may also hurt in retaining the objectivity in some instances.

Lindbergh comes across as a successful but very strange man. It bothers me that Charles and Anne spend so much time away from their children, especially their second son Jon right after the Lindbergh Baby Kidnapping episode where their first son was killed. They spend months away from newborn Jon, flying to Greenland, Europe, Africa and South America before returning to him. There is also a particularly disturbing episode where he insists that their infant son be left in a cage on the roof in the cold weather to "toughen him up."

Lindbergh is portrayed as hard-driving but not having much of a personality. This might be because of his intense desire to hide his private life from the public eye. He was one of the first worldwide celebrities who had to cope with the invasion and distortions by the press. He is cold and dictatorial to his family when (rarely) home. He travels constantly, circling the world several times a year into his 70s working for various aircraft concerns and environmental causes.

Lindbergh's scientific work, especially in developing machines to keep human organs alive for transplantation, was very interesting and was something I think most do not know about him. The side of him engaged in scientific endeavors is all the more impressive considering his limited formal education. Also, I did not know about his father's political career, which enabled Charles to spend time among the halls of power in Washington D.C. as a youth.

The America First section dragged a bit, I thought. It is easy to look back on WWII and think our involvement was inevitable, but that was not necessarily the thinking of everyone at the time. Berg does a good job here dissecting Lindbergh's speeches and writings to show the line he walked between patriot and perceived Nazi sympathizer and accused anti-Semite. It also highlights how the press and popular sentiment can skew perception for decades to come, whether something is true or not. Lindbergh visited and was decorated by numerous countries because of his fame, including Nazi Germany in the 1930's. He reported on the military strength of Germany at the time, and lobbied through the America First organization to keep the U.S. out of more destructive European wars. For these efforts and others he was perceived by many at the time to be a Nazi sympathizer. In explaining Lindbergh's controversial public positions prior to WWII, I wonder if Berg may have skewed objectivity a bit in deference to the family.

It must be tough to write a "definitive biography" of a public figure, because it seems as if things often keep coming to light many years later. We know that Charles Lindbergh did a lot of fascinating things, but not necessarily why. Is this because Lindbergh tried to be such a private person? Why did he fly the Atlantic, other than the fact that he thought he could do it? The story lacks emotion. As I read it I began to wonder more and more if Lindbergh had Asperger's syndrome or some derivative of it. After I finished the book I did some research and found out that some people suspect just that. This is something not brought up at all in the book, which may be due to the fact that many symptoms of Asperger's have only been recognized in recent years. In addition, since the volume was published in 1998 and won the Pulitzer Prize, DNA evidence has been uncovered that shows he had as many as 7 illegitimate children by three different European mistresses. I think the book is probably due for an update.
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