Sabtu, 01 Desember 2012

Download , by John R. Barletta

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, by John R. Barletta

, by John R. Barletta


, by John R. Barletta


Download , by John R. Barletta

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, by John R. Barletta

Product details

File Size: 2492 KB

Print Length: 256 pages

Publisher: Citadel (February 1, 2005)

Publication Date: April 1, 2018

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B01DHW8WSO

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#26,247 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

John Bartletta honors his boss and fellow horseman, Ronald Reagan. We learn that Reagan was a true horseman. We learn how the mounted Secret Service came to be. He liked the challenging horses. When he was at the barn, he was one of the hands. If you like horses, you’llProbably like this book.Great line by Dr. Doug Herthel. After examining the grey Anglo Arab El Alamein, Herthel reportedly looked at Barletta and said, “I can’t believe you let the leader of the free worldride this wing nut!”There is one - one - instance that readers may consider political. Barletta mentions Reagan’s reaction to learning the KAL passenger plane was shot down by the former USSR. THAT’S IT!

This is very well done except for few minor editing issues. The most important part is the private glimpse we get of Reagan. Reagan was a superb rider going back to his reserve Commission in the US Cavalry in the 1930s. He learned to ride the Army way although he could not later pass the physical for active duty when the war began. His riding was right out of the Cavalry Manual that George Patton knew by heart. Reagan always rode thoroughbreds and had a couple of stories about his movie career days riding. The author came to know the President after the 1980 election because there had not been an American president who rode horses in a long time. Finding a Secret Service detail who could ride was a big task. As it happened, the author loved horses and knew about them. This began a 25 year relationship with the Reagans that ended only with Ronald Reagan's death in 1997. I lived in the Malibu area when Reagan was governor and drove by his ranch in Malibu Canyon many times in the later 50s and early 60s. There is a lot detail about horses and riding in the book that adds to the enjoyment. There is an air of authenticity about Reagan that we are losing with our presidents. We seem to be in an "American Idol" phase of choosing presidents now, although I proud to say I have never seen the program in question. Reagan was far more than an actor as president. He probably could have made a living as a horse handler. An excellent read.One revealing early moment came, at the inauguration, when Jimmy Carter's wife was astonished that Nancy Reagan knew the Secret Service man's first name !

A disjointed collection of stories in no chronological order. Tells how Secret Service Agent Barletta became President Reagan's bodyguard on horse as none of the other agents could actually ride a horse, although they would say they could.Barletta grew up in the Boston area with a large family, did some horse riding as a youth, went into the military and eventually led trail riding out in Arizona, becomoming an expert horseman.When Reagan (Code name 'Rawhide') becomes president Barletta is in the right place at the right time. He shares deep and profound insight such as the president didn't really care to listen to the radio that much, wow!Nancy Reagan gets herself knocked off a horse and he catches her before she even realizes she is falling. They encounter a rattlesnake on a ride and Nancy demands Barletta shoot it, so he does.There are some interesting things like when the President goes to England and rides horses with the Queen.We hear that the President's children are ... overbearing, Ron Jr really doesn't want the secret service with him, waaa.I would have given it three stars, but at the end with Reagan in the throws of Alzheimer's disease we get some touchingly sad stories.In the end Barletta has encoured some physical injuries over the years and is no longer physically able to gurad them so he has to resign, sad. He attends the Reagan funeral.He starts repeating himself at page 190 and Young America's Foundation is mentioned a couple times as it now owns the Reagan Ranch, it appears this was written in conjunction with them for advertising.Has several pages of color pictures in the middle.Does mention that the ONLY place the Presidemt could drive a vehicle (a Jeep) was at the ranch. It has some moments of insight.Does feature several horse-related stores that those in the know about horses will enjoy.

Reading Mr. Barletta's book brought President Reagan "back to life" for me, as well as introducing him as a person, not my President, to me. As I was reading this book near the President's birthday, it was especially endearing. This is a well written, easy read and I highly recommend it!

Reading "Riding with Reagan" is like sitting down with an old friend while he tells you about the greatest job he ever had.He doesn't always tell the story in strict chronological order; sometimes something important occurs to him and he goes off on a tangent. His memories don't always get every detail exactly right. He might repeat himself a little; he stops sometimes to explain some technical thing about his job or how to do a thing the right way, before he relates an anecdote about how somebody goofed things up a bit.You're enjoying the story so much, though, you don't really pay attention to the occasional slip; you just want him to tell you more.This old friend took his job v. seriously, and he has a lot of respect for the people he worked for. He misses them, and he wants you to see them the way he did. He tells his story in a heartfelt way and helps you feel like you were there.To illustrate his story, he includes lots of pictures, and you probably haven't seen most of them before. What he really does is give you a glimpse into a world you may not have thought much about -- what those secret service guys really do -- and he shows you another side of a man that wasn't often covered.

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