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Book cover of All American : Why I Believe in Football, God, and the War in Iraq
Sports & Adventure Biography, Urban Architecture & Design, United States History - Northeastern & Middle Atlantic Region, Legal Figures, Law Enforcers, & Criminals, Football & Rugby, Terrorism, Geographic Locations - Architecture, Sports & Adventure Biogr

All American : Why I Believe in Football, God, and the War in Iraq

by Robert McGovern
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Overview

Imagine what it's like to come face-to-face with a terrorist in a foreign courtroom - and you're the lawyer looking to put him away.

Imagine what it's like to see happy children in Iraq and Afghanistan smiling and waving at U.S. military helicopters.

Imagine what it's like to be an undersized linebacker in the National Football League, where most of the players you're supposed to tackle weigh more than you.

Imagine what it's like to be the seventh of nine kids growing up in an Irish Catholic family in the 1970s.

Imagine what it's like to be Robert McGovern, current captain in the U.S. Army, National Football League veteran, and proud member of a loving New Jersey family.

Robert McGovern has a story to tell - not about himself, although he's a part of it - but about the men and women he has called friends, mentors, and heroes. From his days in Catholic school to his years as a college and professional football player to his current career as an army judge advocate general, McGovern knows an all-American when he sees one. And in this book he introduces you to the ones he's met from all walks of life.

McGovern traded his shoulder pads for legal briefs more than a decade ago. He prosecuted drug dealers while working in the office of Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau. On September 11, 2001, he was in lower Manhattan when the Twin Towers fell. After working the pile at Ground Zero, McGovern asked to be mobilized from his Army Reserve duty to active duty. He was first sent to Afghanistan, where he advised battlefield commanders on legal rules of engagement. He then went to Iraq to prosecute terrorist suspects. He returned from both tours convinced that Americans needed to hear another side of the war on terrorism - the side he saw firsthand.

Author's Response to the Critics:
I am the author of All American and I would like to provide Barnes & Noble readers with a response to some critical reviews of my book that have recently been posted to the Barnes & Noble listing for my book. In sum, the reviews of my book criticize me for serving as a brainwashed cheerleader for the Bush administration and our Iraq policy. These critics further claim that I refuse to admit that anything bad has even happened in Iraq and that I paint an unrealistically rosy picture of a difficult and costly conflict. I disagree with these reviews completely. Based on some of their conclusions, it is only reasonable to assume that the reviewers must have failed to read significant sections of my book. I do not deny that that the war in Iraq and Afghanistan have been difficult. I was there, I know first hand. Instead, I state that it is the mainstream news coverage of the war that has provided Americans with an unrealistic picture of the war and, I believe, Americans are entitled to an accurate and complete picture of what is happening over there. As I stated on the very first page of my book, we are living in a difficult and divided time in our nation's history. I didn't write this book to make those divisions worse. I wrote this book to get a few things off my chest and to tell you about some incredible heroes I've met along the way. I also wrote this book so that our nation can have a full and complete discussion on the direction of our country and to encourage all of us to hash out our differences in a civil manner. These reviews only serve to further drive a wedge between Americans. My book was not intended for this purpose. My book was written in order to start a discussion that will, hopefully, bring us closer together as a nation. A discussion that will enable us to talk to each other as friends and neighborsβ€”not as adversaries. We may disagree with each other but we will be talking to each other. Let the conversation begin. β€” Robert McGovern

About the Author, Robert McGovern

Robert P. McGovern, forty, was born in New Jersey just a few miles from the Meadowlands Sports Complex. After graduating from Holy Cross College, he surprised scouts and even himself by getting drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs. He made the team, and later played for the Pittsburgh Steelers and the New England Patriots. After his NFL days were over, he attended Fordham University's law school, went to work as a prosecutor, and brought those legal skills with him when he was assigned as a judge advocate general in the U.S. Army's 18th Airborne Corps. He helped prosecute the notorious case of Sergeant Hasan Akbar, accused of killing two army comrades in Kuwait. After tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, McGovern is currently stationed in Virginia.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

God and football are justified by the author's Catholic education and his four-season stint as an NFL linebacker (with the Chiefs, Steelers and Patriots), full of gridiron pratfalls and hymns to teamwork, goal setting and perseverance. The war in Iraq is justified by his experiences as an army lawyer prosecuting terrorists and insurgents in Baghdad, which he elaborates with strident rhetoric-"we serve the cause for [sic] peace and life, while our enemy seeks only chaos and death"-and tendentious argument. McGovern's case is simplistic and one-sided. He blames the violence in Iraq entirely on foreign terrorists while ignoring the sectarian strife engulfing the country. He insists that Saddam was a "clear and present danger" who would have attacked America if he could. Instead of confronting critics of the Iraq War head-on, McGovern conflates them with unnamed straw men who allegedly want to coddle Osama bin Laden. It all merges into a manifesto, complete with broadsides denouncing drugs and supporting the death penalty, a touch of France-bashing and jockishly cloying salutes to lawyer colleagues ("Deep down inside, John is really just a big old Teddy bear"), revered coaches and other all-Americans. McGovern's stay-the-course cheerleading seems irrelevant to the agonizing quandaries confronting America in Iraq or the results of the recent elections. Photos. (Jan. 30) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

From NFL champion to law school to New York City's district attorney's office to service in the U.S. Army as a prosecuting lawyer, inspired by post-9/11 patriotism. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Linebacker turned JAG officer McGovern delivers propaganda for the Bush administration. His ideologically driven autobiography denounces steroids, extols Ronald Reagan (under whose leadership "everything changed and it changed for the better") and explains why loyal Americans shouldn't criticize the war-which, despite media reports to the contrary, the U.S. is handily winning. Before turning to contemporary geopolitics, McGovern describes his picture-perfect childhood growing up in a large Catholic family devoted to church and the gridiron. After a football career that took him to the NFL, he attended law school and enlisted in the Army Reserves as a member of the Judge Army General Corps (he became a military attorney, in lay terms). After 9/11, he was sent to Afghanistan and then Iraq, but McGovern thinks his most significant work happened at Fort Bragg, where he led the prosecution of Hasan Akbar, a member of the 101st Airborne Division who in 2003 launched a grenade attack against the other men in his unit. One of the book's few gripping passages describes the horrible violence Akbar unleashed on his fellow soldiers. Elsewhere, McGovern's prose mostly trades in rah-rah cliches. In his less-than-nuanced view, the Iraq war hasn't included a single misstep. The U.S. is "engaged in a desperate struggle against forces of hate and repression," and anyone who questions the war has been brainwashed by the media. Once he sets the record straight, all those gullible doubters will "come to agree we should be in Iraq and Afghanistan and we will succeed...if we just have the courage to see this thing through to victory." McGovern even papers over Abu Ghraib. Although he doesn't want to "excuseaccusations of terrible crimes committed by a few American service personnel," he insists that when he visited the prison, he found it to be a bastion of "professionalism, leadership and respect for human dignity."Destined to win accolades from Fox News.

Book Details

Published
February 20, 2007
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780061227851

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