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NEW YORK. FEBRUARY 7
We are told that 960 books have been written about Ronald Reagan, which registers that he continues to be an object of consuming historical curiosity, 95 years after he was born. That emanation confounds liberal critics, who assessed him many years ago as a bumpkin with oratorical gifts pandering to American self-esteem.
But Reagan alive prevailed over that stereotype, and Reagan dead is airborne as never before. One recent book, President Reagan: The Triumph of Imagination, is by Richard Reeves, a skillful historian who got on to an enormously interesting device in his books on Nixon and Kennedy. He would take you to opening day of ...