Pataki: An Autobiography
by George E. Pataki, Daniel PaisnerGeorge E. Pataki is the real McCoy. He's a small-town boy from Peekskill, New York, thirty-five miles up the Hudson River from New York City. There are wonderful characters from the Peekskill days - the headstrong Grandpa Pataki, determined to raise the best vegetables on the hardscrabble farm his own way; the governor's father, a mailman and devoted volunteer fireman… See more details below
Overview
George E. Pataki is the real McCoy. He's a small-town boy from Peekskill, New York, thirty-five miles up the Hudson River from New York City. There are wonderful characters from the Peekskill days - the headstrong Grandpa Pataki, determined to raise the best vegetables on the hardscrabble farm his own way; the governor's father, a mailman and devoted volunteer fireman; and cousins galore available for expeditions, games, and general mischief when the day's work was done. In 1994 Pataki stunned the political world by defeating Mario Cuomo in the gubernatorial election. He tells the inside story of this incredible upset victory, and talks about what it takes to run the diverse state of New York.
Editorial Reviews
--Jill Ortner, SUNY at Buffalo Libraries
His is the classic second-generation-American-makes-good story. The Hungarian Patakis were poor farmers in Peekskill, NY; George worked hard on the farm; they didn't have much, but they were rich in other ways, i.e., the important social and moral ways that ultimately enabled him to understand, say, how to reform welfare. The son of a mailman, George went to Yale and then Columbia Law School. He tried the large corporate law-firm scene but didn't really have the stomach for it. Pataki turned to politics, where he served first as Peekskill's mayor and then eventually as a state representative. Finally, after winning races that no one thought he could, he took on Democratic demigod Mario Cuomo and won. The book chronicles a little of that race but mostly focuses on Pataki's roots, which he clumsily uses to enlighten readers about his Republican public policies. His summer stint on the coal cars at the nearby Fleischmann's factory, for instance, enabled him, he says, to have "enormous respect for people who work in production and manufacturing." That led to the theory that "we need enlightened employers who understand that the employees are part of a team, that they have an obligation to protect workers and an interest in helping them succeed."
A thinly veiled campaign tool that might be a useful history for politicalreporters, pundits, and politicians wondering what makes Pataki tick, but as interesting reading for the general public? Fuhgeddaboutit.
Product Details
- ISBN-13:
- 9780670873395
- Publisher:
- Penguin Publishing Group
- Publication date:
- 06/01/1998
- Pages:
- 256
- Product dimensions:
- 6.36(w) x 9.26(h) x 0.87(d)
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