Golda Meir was the first female head of state in the Western world and
one of the most influential women in modern history. A blend of Emma
Goldman and Martin Luther King Jr. in the guise of a cookie-serving
grandmother, her uncompromising devotion to shaping and defending a
Jewish homeland against dogged enemies and skittish allies stunned
political contemporaries and transformed Middle Eastern politics for
decades to follow. She outmaneuvered Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger
at their own game of Realpolitik, and led Israel through a bloody war
even as she eloquently pleaded for peace, carrying her nation through
its most perilous hours while she herself battled cancer.
In this masterful biography, critically acclaimed author Elinor Burkett
paints a vivid portrait of a legendary woman defined by contradictions:
an iron resolve coupled with magnetic charm, a kindly demeanor that
disguised a stunning hard-heartedness, and a complete dedication to her
country that often overwhelmed her personal relationships.