Michael Beschloss is an award-winning historian of the Presidency and the author of eight books.
His college thesis, an analysis of the relationship between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph P. Kennedy, became his first book: Kennedy and Roosevelt: The Uneasy Alliance (1980), published just at the time Beschloss graduated from Harvard Business School. Though he planned to go into business and write history on the side, the success of his book allowed him to pursue a career as a full-time historian. His second book, Mayday: Eisenhower, Krushchev and the U-2 Affair, published in 1986, confirmed his reputation as both a scrupulous political historian and a popular writer of a kind of novelistic history that appealed to a wide audience.
Beschloss has worked as a political analyst for the Cable News Network (CNN) and has appeared as a commentator on a number of television programs, including Nightline, Meet the Press, and News Hour with Jim Lehrer. His other notable books include The Crisis Years: Kennedy and Krushchev, 1960-1963 (1991); The Highest Levels: The Inside Story of the End of the Cold War (1993), on which he collaborated with Strobe Talbott; and Taking Charge (1997), based on the once-secret White House tapes of Lyndon Johnson.
Questions? Contact Us Any Time:
805.965.1400
info@bigspeak.com
Called “the nation’s leading Presidential historian” by Newsweek, Beschloss has made history himself, serving as the first presidential historian for NBC News—the first time any major network has created such a position. Appearing regularly on Meet the Press, The Today Show, The Daily Show, and all NBC network programs, he provides expert analysis of the executive branch. In 2005, he won an Emmy for his role in creating and hosting the Discovery Channel series Decisions That Shook the World.