"Peter Collier has succeeded in doing what Jeane Kirkpatrick could not do. Drawing upon her unfinished memoir, as well as countless interviews and other sources, he has written a candid yet sympathetic account of the personal life and public career of an extraordinary woman." --Gertrude Himmelfarb, author of The Moral Imagination and The People of the Book "In sterling prose filled with good sense, Peter Collier masterfully chronicles the nontraditional career of Jeane Kirkpatrick--devoted mother and wife, brilliant teacher and scholar, dauntless representative to the UN, hawkish public intellectual during the Cold War. He reminds us that Kirkpatrick's career was marked by a lot of 'what ifs,' but also that her influence on U.S. foreign policy ran far deeper than is usually imagined." --Victor Davis Hanson, author of A War Like No Other and The End of Sparta "Peter Collier has written a vivid and moving account of a remarkable life whose complexity he renders with subtlety and eloquence. He understood Jeane's ideas and her significance, and brilliantly weaves both into a rich tapestry that is both astute and intimate. Collier shows convincingly how Jeane's life shaped her ideas and how those ideas shaped our history." --Richard Perle, Assistant Secretary of Defense in the Reagan administration