Primer for the Foreign Service Exam | Consular Tales | William S. Shepard
 
 


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Consular Tales
William S. Shepard

Xlibris Corporation, 2001 - 184 pages

average customer review:based on 4 reviews
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Life in the foreign service

I have been thinking about joining the U.S. Foreign Service and this first-hand account was absorbing and illuminating. I found the personal insight into an often challenging and dangerous career most impressive. It is written in a forthright manner with welcome touches of humor. I would recommend this book to anyone interested not only in traveling and working abroad but also to those who have already done so. It is also for those who like adventures and enjoy autobiographies. More from this author, please!


Book Review

I thought that Consular Tales was a delightful book. It was fun, and imformative as well. It was the kind of book that I didn't want to put down and was sorry when it ended that I read it so fast. So many books nowadays are not well written but this was obviously written by a scholar and seasoned auther. Is this someone who has previously been published under another name? I hope that I will be able to read more fiction or non-fiction from this very accomplished author. Do we have another Sir Jeffrey Archer in William Shepard? I think Archer is a suburb storyteller as is Mr. Shepard. Lets have somemore tales from Mr. Shepard soon.


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Primer for the Foreign Service Exam

I recently passed the Oral Assessment portion of the Foreign Service Exam and can attest to the relevance of William Shepard's experiences in "Consular Tales" to the type of hypothetical situations raised by the examiners. A Foreign Service candidate will learn not only from the specific examples cited in the book, but more importantly from Mr. Shepard's thought process while handling a wide variety of issues facing members of the diplomatic corps.

Page for the page, Consular Tales is the best study guide for preparing yourself to take the Foreign Service Exam.


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A Consular Life Well-Lived and Well-Told

William Shepard tells us that when a colleague in the Foreign Service once asked him why, with a Harvard Law School degree and the prospect of a highly lucrative law career, he'd chosen the consular life, he said that it was because he "didn't want to wake up one morning later in life and wonder what living in Singapore would have been like." How fortunate for the United States that a man with Shepard's intelligence, compassion, humor, and grace chose the path he did, and so clearly relished it. This fascinating view of the consular life takes us around the world and across the decades: from Budapest, where Shepard regularly strolled the American Embassy courtyard with Cardinal Mindszenty during the prelate's years in residence there in sanctuary from Hungary's Communist regime; to Saigon, doing staff work for the secret negotiations that led to the Paris Peace Talks; to Singapore, where he tossed back a few San Miguel beers with the original Bill Bailey of the song; and finally to Bordeaux, where as Consul General he found money where there was none to fund a commemorative plaque for a French Resistance fighter by holding one less Consulate dinner party.

What struck me again and again in my reading was Shepard's commitment not only to the welfare of his country and its citizens abroad but his understanding, sympathy, and affection for the countries in which he served and for their citizens. This is a vivid tale of a life lived well and vibrantly, recounted with wit and elegance. It's sometimes surprising and always instructive, not only about what a consular job requires but also about the way to do it right. Shepard says that his hope in writing this book was to inspire young people to take the path of service he'd traveled. If I were a few years younger, I'd be filling out an application and packing my bags.


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William S. Shepard always wanted to join the career American Foreign Service. Years later, a law school classmate remembered Shepard?s career choice. Why not join a Wall Street law firm? "I wanted to know what it was like to wake up and see the sun rise in Singapore," Shepard had said in law school.

He got that chance in Singapore, and lots of consular action besides, from dealing with sailors to repatriating the down and out and conducting security investigations. The local color was intriguing, as Shepard found out the local importance of ghosts, appeasing tree spirits, and keeping one?s back to the wall when pursuing drunken sailors in the downtown dock area.

Saigon during the Viet-Nam War is shown through a Consul?s unique perspective. Shepard discovers the way that the Viet Cong shipped guns into Saigon during the Tet Offensive in coffins, and describes the painstaking work of a consular office in facilitating adoptions of Vietnamese children.

In Budapest during the Cold War, security shadowing was a normal part of the everyday diplomatic experience. So was Shepard?s friendship with His Eminence Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty, then in refuge at the American Embassy on Freedom Square. Shepard describes his walks with Cardinal Mindszenty, as Hungarian security police strained to take pictures of them and record their conversations. Shepard also takes us on a journey to eastern Hungary to visit a very old woman, whose Social Security claim needed verification. Her view of the United States and what our country could be was a highpoint of the author?s diplomatic service.

Shepard knows from experience that a Consul?s day doesn?t quite end at a predictable hour. He also shows us that the next problem that a Consul faces could affect the security of the United States, or the outcome of a presidential election, citing the attempted renunciation of his American citizenship by Lee Harvey Oswald at the American Embassy in Moscow, and the mishandling of the passport files of Bill Clinton when he was a student in England during the 1992 presidential election. From Vice Consul to the highest consular official, the Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs, the work requires dedication, competence and common sense. As Shepard tells us, "It matters, it matters greatly, and it cannot be done by telegram, from somewhere else."

Consular Tales was inspired by the closing of the American Consulate General in Bordeaux, as a budgetary decision by the Clinton Administration in 1996. This was our oldest American Consulate General, opened by President George Washington in 1790. The mission was only closed briefly twice in its long history, when war between France and the United States seemed possible at the end of the eighteenth century, and then again during the Second World War, during the Nazi Occupation.

Shepard hopes that by demonstrating what consular work actually is done at a Consulate General, that more young Americans will be inspired to choose this work as their career. And now that national budgetary pressures have eased, the reopening of the most historic American Consulate General should follow. If it does, Consular Tales will have served its larger purpose, and an important chapter of American consular history will be preserved and extended.


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