Kirkus Reviews praised the book as a "measured, mostly admiring" biography with a "lengthy, well-documented argument" but criticised it as inferior compared to Eisenhower in War and Peace by Jean Edward Smith.[9] This sentiment was shared by a review from The Economist, which also complimented the book's overall verdict.[7] Likewise, Steven Casey, reviewing in Cold War History, lauded the book as timely, and "cogently argued". Casey additionally praised the book's writing as elegant.[10] Publishers Weekly described the book as a revisionist biography, praising its comprehensiveness, persuasion, and usage of documents. The review concluded that the author "succeeds in positioning Ike as a world-historical figure".[5] Similarly, Bryce Christensen from Booklist called the book "complete and persuasive".[11] Reviewing from The Wall Street Journal, Richard Rhodes generally praised the book as a "rich narrative".[3] Alvin S. Felzenberg from The Claremont Review of Books described the book as masterly, and concluded that the book "should provide a decent burial to one of the worst predictions in U.S. history".[12] David Stebenne from The American Historical Review commented that the book included "new and intriguing arguments" despite the familiarity of its subject matter. The reviewer additionally complimented Hitchcock's coverage of civil rights as "sensible and fair", but criticised the author's omission on why Eisenhower neglected this issue.[1]
The book's coverage of foreign affairs was described as the main focus of the book.[2][3][10] Casey called it as the book's centrepiece.[10] Felzenberg also lauded the book's coverage of CIA coups.[12] In contrast, David Watry, reviewing from Journal of Cold War Studies, criticised some of the descriptions of Eisenhower's foreign policy as misleading, commenting negatively towards Hitchcock's recount on the Korean Armistice Agreement. The review also reprobated the book's omissions regarding details of the 1956 Suez Crisis and the administration's handling of Vietnam in 1954, despite complimenting Hitchcock's coverage of domestic affairs. Watry concluded that the author "makes a good case for Eisenhower as a “consequential” president", while criticising several of Hitchcock's judgements.[2] Stebenne expressed that the evidence Hitchcock used was impressive, despite Hitchcock's judgements on Eisenhower's foreign policy having some contradictions. The reviewer later summarised that the book had "a clear, coherent narrative", and also praised the prose and succinctness.[1]