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| | Description | Alter, a native of Chicago who has known Obama and his circle for nearly a decade, provides a fast-paced inside account of the breakneck speed with which President-elect Obama, and then President Obama, began making critical decisions and assuming the burdens of office amid the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression. With dozens of exclusive details about everything from the selection of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state to the president’s secrets for running a good meeting, Alter paints a fresh and often surprising portrait of a highly disciplined and self-aware president and his colorful team. We see a young president of extraordinary temperament grappling with the task of stimulating the economy, bailing out large banks, taking over the American auto industry, making the crucial decision about sending more troops to Afghanistan, deciding whether to negotiate with Iran about its nuclear program, and fighting for a major reform of the country’s health care system. Alter explains what Obama is like in private, how he operates, and why he is so insistent on leading the country and the world into a new era of wrenching change. |  |
| | Product Details | | Author: | Jonathan Alter | | Hardcover: | 480 pages | | Publisher: | Simon & Schuster | | Publication Date: | May 18, 2010 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 1439101191 | | Product Length: | 9.46 inches | | Product Width: | 6.56 inches | | Product Height: | 1.51 inches | | Product Weight: | 1.54 pounds | | Package Length: | 9.3 inches | | Package Width: | 6.5 inches | | Package Height: | 1.6 inches | | Package Weight: | 1.65 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 77 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 77 customer reviews )
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25 of 32 found the following review helpful:
Readable, vivid and balanced. Aug 27, 2010
By Marjorie This is a vivid description of the day-to-day operation of the Obama administration in the chaotic first year of his presidency. Overall, I think it was a fair assessment of both Obama's strengths and his weaknesses.
I'm surprised that some of the reviewers here think that Alter's book is overly biased in favor of Obama.
It's clear that the writer thinks highly of Obama personally -- he portrays him as highly intelligent and possessed of effective leadership skills. But Alter is also very clear-eyed about where Obama has gone wrong in the first year of his presidency.
Alter gives Obama credit for actions early in the presidency (the bank and automaker bail-outs) that were unpopular, but probably saved the recession from tipping over into a depression, and for the historic health care legislation. With health care, Obama delivered on something that presidents since FDR have tried and failed to do. Nobody thinks it is a perfect plan but it is something that can be built on.
But Alter faults Obama in other crucial areas -- particularly jobs and housing. Obama, as portrayed by Alter, errs in relying too heavily on one set of economists -- Geithner, Summers, and their acolytes -- while essentially ignoring contradictory views. Everything had to be funnelled through Summers. Obama, in Alter's analysis, thereby encloses himself in the "bubble" that he had said he was going to try to avoid.
Alter also faults Obama for failing to communicate effectively with the American people about what he was trying to do. Obama's cool, unemotional personality does not serve him well, in a situation which required the warmth and empathy that an FDR or a Clinton were able to convey.
Alter's conclusion, apparently somewhat surprising to the writer himself, is that Obama turned out to be best at what was least expected of him -- effective executive management -- and worst in the area where he (as one of the most inspirational and eloquent speakers in recent history) was expected to shine -- communicating with the people.
153 of 210 found the following review helpful:
Biased account, but with inside access May 19, 2010
By Enjolras I am an independent who voted for Obama in 2008 and don't regret it (although I am somewhat disappointed in his first year). However, in writing books about politicians, the political scientist in me believes it is crucial to remain objective and try to separate the spin from the reality. For whatever reason, all too often the journalists with the best access in political circles also tend to be the most biased or least analytical. Unfortunately, Jonathan Alter's The Promise: President Obama, Year One is no exception. This book is, to put it kindly, very sympathetic toward the administration.
What do I mean by "sympathetic"? I don't certainly mind if an author admires his subject or favors his policy choices. However, Alter seems determined to find no fault with Obama and dismiss all of his failures as the fault of others. In the introduction, Alter seems to blame Obama's first-year woes on the president's overconfidence in the - get this - the American people. Too often, voters are portrayed as dumb, Republicans as devious, and Obama's policy choices as all brilliant, if misunderstood. However, let's be honest - there are many people who have honest concerns about Obama's policies. I myself agree with some (foreign policy), but not others (healthcare). Sometimes, I got the sense Alter simply repeated spin from the administration. This sort of bias in The Promise: President Obama, Year One is simply unacceptable in real a history.
This type of "journalistic history" book is really built around a few revealing anecdotes, without much substance or depth. Probably the biggest reveal is that Greg Craig was offered a judgeship in an attempt to get him to leave the White House quietly. Of course, if you live outside the Beltway, you probably don't know who Greg Craig even is. There are also some interesting comparisons between Obama and Bill Clinton by staffers who worked for both. However, frankly, you could probably read about the most interesting tidbits on Politico's or other political blogs. I wouldn't recommend buying the book unless you're a political junkie.
Overall, this is a 3-star book - with that third star added in recognition of Alter's hard work getting access and anecdotes. As a study of Obama's first year, it falls short.
A note on the audiobook: Jonathan Alter reads it himself, which is a nice touch.
26 of 36 found the following review helpful:
An even-handed treatment of the first year of the Obama presidency Jun 09, 2010
By OldRoses Barack Obama is not a saint. What a relief. "The Promise: President Obama, Year One", written by Jonathan Alter, a "Newsweek" reporter, is a refreshing change from the worshipful treatment of President Obama in "Game Change". Mr. Alter provides an even-handed treatment of the first year of the Obama presidency. He shows us a president who is all too human, making mistakes in both personnel and policies but mostly getting it right.
The reader is provided with thorough background information on all of the major players in President Obama's administration. I was especially fascinated by the description of Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel's agonizing decision whether to take the job as Chief of Staff or remain in the House, eventually succeeding Nancy Pelosi to become the first Jewish Speaker of the House. First Jewish Speaker? I had no idea that anyone thought that way in the 21st century. I thought that we had put silly religious issues behind us. I'm old enough to remember when (Catholic) JFK was running for the presidency and voters (including my Goldwater Republican parents) were terrified that if he were elected, the Pope would be running the country. As history reminds us, JFK was elected and governed the country without the Pope.
First Lady Michelle Obama is treated respectfully. I was surprised to learn that despite her husband never having been subject to rumors of infidelity, she is described as "a tiger when it came to Barack and other women.", the example of Halle Berry's enthusiasm in campaigning for Obama prompting the future First Lady to forbid her husband to appear with her.
Mr. Alter's previous book, "The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope", dealt with FDR and the New Deal. Not surprisingly, he frequently draws parallels between President Obama's first year in office and FDR's first year in office. Both entered office faced with a collapsing economy. Both were forced to clean up the messes left by the previous administrations. And both passed landmark legislation in their first year, Social Security by FDR and health care reform by Obama.
It's often difficult to end a book of this length and breadth, especially with the protagonist still early in his administration and still likely to continue making history, but I found the ending to this book very satisfying. The long, drawn-out battle for health care reform takes up most of the book, but in the end the reader is reminded of President Obama's other first year accomplishments such as banning pay discrimination against women (always close to my heart), health insurance for millions of children, tightened rules governing credit cards and the crackdown on predatory lending, achievements that have become lost in the noise and confusion of the battle over health care, but which are huge victories in their own right.
164 of 235 found the following review helpful:
Quite Possibly the #1 Obama Book Written so Far ! May 18, 2010
By Bobby Lexington
"Southern Man"
I can just hear the critics now saying: "Great...another Obama book." But this is an outstanding look at Obama's first year--with highly entertaining, and never before documented, details. The author got unprecedented access, and that makes the book quite rich. The details show that Obama has an edge to him--an extremely competitive one--teetering on...well...just read the book. He seems to have his hand in everything, and is clearly the conductor of this orchestra. I found it noteworthy that as Obama wanted to pursue Health Care in his first year, Rahm Emanuel tried to talk him out of it. I also marveled at the behind-the-scenes activity surrounding the Professor Gates race issue and Beer Summit. Also, the details surrounding how he handled the economic crisis from the lonely confines of the Oval Office will be absorbing to any reader. All of the issues I was familiar with are covered in this book, but we get to see it from the administration's point of view--how they planned and plotted every move--from damage control to keeping the media at bay. In fact, there is an underlying feeling that he and his administration harbor a disdain for the corporate media, ever since they helped perpetuate the floating General Election innuendo that he was intimately linked to William Ayers, not born here, and embraced Reverend Wright's anti-Americanism--all subjects that are supremely documented and analyzed in the groundbreaking book: 71 Days: The Media Assault On Obama.
Folks should read "The Promise" and stop talking about how there are just too many Obama books being written. Besides, every president since GW has had hundreds of books written about him. It's par for the course. See Abe Lincoln's one-zillionth book. The question is: Can any of these books stand the test of time? This one certainly will. And considering that 200 years from now, the only person that elementary students will be required to know from this entire generation will be President Obama, I would say we need even more books on the man. The only presidents I had to know in elementary school were Washington and Lincoln--not Madison, Jackson, or Polk. Why?...because they were the revolutionary, symbolic ones that were romanticized to young children. Think about this: your great, great, great grandchild will have to give answers to these questions regarding US presidents: 1) who was the first president? 2) which president freed the slaves? 3) who was the first African American president? Pretty powerful, and it should make us appreciate the time period and history we're living through. "The Promise" captures a significant portion of that history.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Good insight into Obama's management style Jan 10, 2011
By Joseph Landes The Promise is one of what has already been and what I am sure will be many many more books about President Obama. When evaluating a book like this and especially one that has been named a NY Times Notable Book of 2010, it is important to ask what is different about this book. Or in other words, what unique lessons can you learn from this book relative to others that are written about Obama.
The book itself didn't move particularly fast and in my opinion wasn't particularly interesting to the point where you felt like it was a page-turner. I picked it up and put it down a number of times. Overall though I did in fact like it and primarily because it gave me good insight into how Obama managed his staff and the White House. It was super interesting to read about how Obama knew ahead of time that the Democrats were not super good at managing the WH and that the Republicans and especially GWB were. Now people can say that Bush had a lot of faults but it did seem to Obama as if he was managing in a tighter way that others did. The chapters that had more to do with who Obama was as a person and specifically how he spent his offtime with his body man Reggie Love and his family were super interesting. You don't always get to read a lot about that sort of thing until the end of someone's presidency and in this case you got to see it right up front.
This look at Obama's first year in the White House was interesting and covered a lot of topics--which makes sense given the sheer number of things on the Presiden't plate on any given day. Af-Pak, the economy, picking a Cabinet, etc. A good book that provided a lot of insight into Obama the person.
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