"Greene presents a persuasive study of Dwight D. Eisenhower’s campaign for the White House in 1952. As complex and carefully researched as his earlier works, Greene’s newest study presents a nuanced understanding of the issues at hand. This text is an excellent publication for anyone with an interest in either presidential elections for the Eisenhower period."—H-Net Reviews
"Likely to become the standard work on the 1952 presidential election."—Journal of American History
"Greene’s book will deservedly be the go-to study on the 1952 campaign."—Presidential Studies Quarterly
"Greene has drawn a wonderful portrait of politics in a different time. His book represents the strong work of an accomplished scholar and makes interesting reading for students and scholars wanting to understand how much politics has been transformed [since 1952]."—Congress & the Presidency
"A well-researched, comprehensive, and valuable study. It will prove to be essential reading for students and accomplished researchers in history and political science interested in the 1952 presidential election."—Journal of Southern History
"Essential reading for political historians and anyone interested in American politics. In this accessible work, Greene does a masterful job of weaving an interesting, compelling tale of the election of 1952."—Kansas History
"With fresh eyes and insights, Greene presents a well-organized account of the primary elections, the two national nominating conventions, and the contest between the beloved WWII hero, Republican Dwight Eisenhower, and the intellectual governor of Illinois, Adlai Stevenson."—Choice
"Using primary and secondary sources with aplomb, Greene has produced an excellent work, one that should stand the test of time for its accuracy and interpretation of this important postwar election."—Library Journal (starred review)
"John Robert Greene tells the story of a presidential election that seems remarkably familiar. It features a Republican nominee who had never before sought political office and who had no previous connection to the GOP running against an experienced Democratic nominee, who seemed far more comfortable with complex policy issues. Greene examines how the Republican candidate used a new electronic medium to reach voters, even while simplifying his message. And he concludes that issues mattered less than the passion that the Republican candidate inspired. Sound familiar? Greene, however, is writing about the election of 1952, in which a newcomer to politics, Dwight D. Eisenhower, overwhelmed the eloquent governor of Illinois, Adlai Stevenson, while using the new medium of television to run the first 20-second presidential campaign commercials. With a keen eye for a revealing piece of evidence or a telling anecdote, Greene explains how Ike’s popularity translated into a landslide victory at a time when millions of voters were tired of “the mess in Washington.” I Like Ike is a book that anybody interested in politics—in the 1950s or today—can read with enormous benefit."—Chester Pach, associate professor of history, Ohio University
"One nominee who was the classic organization candidate and another who was a strikingly unpartisan outsider, yet both nominations made, not just ratified, at their national party conventions. In an election contest that was evidently deviant from, rather than diagnostic of, its predecessors and its successors. The presidential election of 1952 was thus so near to, and yet so far from, the presidential contest of 2016. I Like Ike: The Presidential Election of 1952 walks the reader carefully and richly back through all of that: Eisenhower versus Stevenson and the downfall of the delegate leaders for their respective nominations in a contest proving that the new Democratic majority was not invincible but one that Republicans would not replicate for a long time to come. And on top of all that, an election which, despite its partisan deviance, established the Cold War electoral world for a very long time. I Like Ike brings it all to life in lively but comprehensive detail."—Byron E. Shafer, Hawkins Chair of Political Science, University of Wisconsin
"In his new and persuasive account of the election, Greene presents a more complicated view of Eisenhower and Stevenson, and, with a far greater sense of duty and patriotism than allowed for in his earlier view of the two men. And Greene writes with the style of a top-notch investigative reporter."—Burton I. Kaufman, author of The Post-Presidency from Washington to Clinton