How a Book Lifted the Fog of War for a Father and Son

OP-ED: Publishers have begun to serve up memoirs from likely 2016 presidential aspirants - Hillary Clinton, Ted Cruz, and Rand Paul - the books already available or their authors soon to be on bookseller campaign circuits.

There are also leftovers from the 2012 primaries and explanations and justifications from Robert Gates and Timothy Geithner. Left to me, I’d campaign for Bill Geist – for president. He writes his own stuff without mockery or skewering and lets us in on the unusual, the otherwise uncelebrated.

With appreciation, and delight not tinged with barbs, he tells stories of people who would not be invoked to make a partisan point in a campaign speech. He tells of places that are not on any candidate’s campaign route (a one-person town, for example).

Often humorous, Bill Geist’s chronicles of quirky people and places for CBS Sunday Morning broadcasts have provided a respite from the ultra-predictable talking-points blather of the other Sunday morning “news” shows.

Sadly, Parkinson’s disease precludes his presidential candidacy. Parkinson’s might also stall any grass-roots campaign to have him named the commissioner of Major League Baseball. But his recently published collaboration with his son Willie (MSNBC’s Morning Joe and NBC’s Today) is surely a public service – and reading those father-son exchanges should be a national pastime.

Reminiscences, Reflections, But No Recriminations
In contrast to the self-serving stewings of politicians, the Geists’ Good Talk, Dad is the book equivalent of a kitchen table – home style, family style; nothing “cooked up.”

In the introduction, Willie explains that his father “grew up in the middle of the stoic Midwest in a time and place where you didn’t sit down and talk about your feelings a whole lot.” By way of context, Bill explains that psychiatrists weren’t thriving in Champaign, Illinois, where he grew up.

So father and son share with us their point-counterpoint regarding sports, summer camps, imbibing, girls – and what their boyhoods and fatherhoods have taught them. Stuff that would not be in any candidate’s campaign bio, but all the more interesting and entertaining – and more worthwhile than any candidate’s biopic.

Revealing, too, in meaningful and poignant ways: For the first time, Bill reveals what he did, saw, heard, and felt as a combat photographer in Vietnam in 1969.

Capturing the Vietnam War
Given all that Bill and Willie Geist shared with each other, over the past thirty-plus years, it may seem surprising that Bill never spoke about his year in Vietnam with the First Infantry Division.