Wow, this was an excellent, rivetingly written biography--I raptly read and absorbed every single word in print, a big feat for me with a huge date-y nonfiction work. I bought it to own in order to be not beholden to library deadlines, and it was my comfort read, regularly beating all sorts of high adventure fantasy novels. I find the trajectory of Golda's life as exciting as Indiana Jones. After having also listened in entirety to the newer Golda biography Lioness by Francine Klagsbrun, and having found that excellent at the time, in comparison that one now seems gossipy and speculative, where this one contains the true substance of Golda's life and the things she really cared about.
Again, the same for both books, because of who they're about, one simply cannot claim to understand anything at all about the nation of Israel without reading a biography of Golda. Golda was Israel. Israel and everything that has happened to it could not have happened without Golda. As all biographers have pointed out, inherent in that fact is that Israel is very flawed. I could have perhaps done without this author's personal opinion, which she withheld all the way until the very end and closed with, which is basically that Golda failed, big time. I would counter that, while Israel does have the huge flaws that the author points out, Golda accomplished her goal and purpose, which was to tell the world: No. We're not doing pogroms anymore. We are going to carve out a place where you can't get us anymore, and we'll defend it with the most military might we can possibly muster. Of course, the problem is that then that allowed Jews to become The Bad Guy, which gets you right back to where you started, at square one, where regular and famous people feel justified and good about anti-Semitism, which you're now seeing today. No one can say what would have happened if there had been no Israel, and the author sort of seems to say that you can, and that it would have been better. Would Jews have become AND remained the eternal martyr of the world with the Holocaust at great cost (incalculably more extreme genocide), the remaining survivors finding safe haven in America, the true Zion (a popular way of thinking for Jews against Israel and Zionism)? Or, would Jews have really just been totally wiped out and continued the forever-cycle of pogroms, with no place on the world stage and no place in the world other than that? The continual running and being killed? Elinor Burkett basically says that Israel was a huge mistake in the end. In terms of the book and its ending, I would have appreciated more biographical ceremony around her death. What about her funeral? No mention. Instead, after reading the incredible, awe-inspiring journey of her life, that life ends in this book with the words "Golda died." Followed by how flawed she/Israel was.
Aside from content-level discussions like these, it was a great, fascinating, readable book about one of the most amazing people of all time, the insane times she lived through, and is necessarily the history of Israel itself.