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The Life of Lester Pearson, Vol. 2: The Worldly Years, 1949-1972

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The life of Lester Pearson 1949 - 1972.

473 pages, Hardcover

First published August 27, 1992

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John English

8 books5 followers
John English (Canadian politician)

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Czarny Pies.
2,846 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2017
The Worldly Years , covering the years 1949-1972, is the second volume of John English's biography of Lester Pearson. It is not nearly as good as the outstanding first volume which tells the story of Pearson's education and career as a diplomat prior to entering politics.
The first third of The Worldly Years maintains the same level of excellence as achieved in volume one, the Shadow of Heaven as it covers Pearson's years as Minister of External Affairs. This portion of the book has a strong section on Pearson's actions during the Suez Crisis for which he earned his Nobel Prize. It also has an interesting discussion on the Herbert Norman suicide, a Canadian diplomat who committed suicide when he was accused of being a communist by members of the McCarthy hearings. As long English is writing in the area of diplomatic history, English he is in top form. When Pearson loses the External Affairs portfolio as a consequence of the electoral defeat of the Liberals in the 1957 election, the book goes off the rails. For the period after 1957, the best section in the book is the one devoted to de Gaulle's visit to Canada in 1967 during which he shouted the separatist slogan "Vive le Québec libre!" before a crowd in Montréal.
There are also some highly entertaining moments in the last quarter of the book where English relates Lester Pearson's encounters with American President Lyndon Baines Johnson. English describes Johnson haranguing Pearson with obscenities over Pearson's public opposition the American involvement of the VietNam. He also tells the tale of how Johnson when driving Pearson around his Texas ranch would leave his car to urinate urging Pearson to do likewise. Given that Pearson and Johnson's wives were in the following car, Pearson was particularly loath to do so.
Unfortunately outside of the field of foreign relations, English's book provides neither comedy nor insight. I found that English's portrait of Lester Pearson as Prime Minister was too much like that of Peter C. Newman who presented Pearson as a ditherer who had trouble managing his cabinet and who lacked the personal dynamism to promote his own accomplishments.
In fact the events of Pearson's term in office show hime to have been a great leader who got many important laws passed. While Pearson did make a number of errors in managing his ministers in his early years as Prime Minister, he subsequently put together a very strong cabinet that served his successor Pierre Elliot Trudeau very well.
Forty-nine years after Pearson stepped down as Prime Minister in 1968, the current Federal Liberals are still running on Pearson's legislative accomplishments and foreign policy. Among many other things, Pearson's government passed laws giving Canada free healthcare, old age pensions, student loans and bilingualism in the federal civil service. Pearson vigorously supported NATO and the UN. However, he resisted unilateral American actions keeping Canada out of the Viet Nam war. The Federal Liberals in 2017 continue to promote themselves as the creators and defenders of the programs of the Pearson era. Pearson's accomplishments were great. English perhaps not wishing to fall into the trap of giving his subject extravagant praise, falls into the opposite trap of not giving him enough.
In a general pattern, English fails to credit Pearson for either continuing the good work of someone else or starting something that someone else had to finish. John Diefenbaker began trading with Communist China in defiance of the American trade boycott. Pierre Elliot Trudeau ultimately recognized Mao's regime. English gives Pearson no credit for having overseen a growth in the trade relation with China during the interim.
Similarly, English does not mention that the work on the bill that would ultimately decriminalize homosexuality began while Pearson was still in office. In fact, English consistently fails to show the remarkable continuity between the Trudeau and Pearson administrations.
John English's Worldly Years is a very earnest and competent book that anyone interested in the era should enjoy, but it lacks the brilliance of the first volume. It often focuses on the trivial giving only cursory glances at essentials. It is very much worth reading but it is a real comedown from the outstanding volume.




Profile Image for David Akin.
57 reviews6 followers
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December 25, 2021
Simply terrific. Have not yet read the first volume of English' biography and I likely will get to Pearson's three-volume memoir before I come back to English but looking forward to both ...
Profile Image for Doug Adamson.
236 reviews1 follower
October 31, 2017
An interesting account by a writer who seems informed, sympathetic, yet critical. The ending seemed rather abrupt with little discussion of Pearson's ongoing significance--perhaps that is telling in itself and Pearson's legacy was overshadowed by his more flamboyant successors on both sides of the political aisle.
34 reviews
August 24, 2017
Very good study on the life of our Prime Minister, who was unique, in that he came from academia and the public service, not law school and politics.
Profile Image for Lucas.
186 reviews13 followers
October 1, 2012
After about 800 pages with Mike, his death hit me surprisingly hard given its inevitability. A great Canadian; a mostly great biography.
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