logo
#

Latest news with #SiegeandLandslide

The best books on Donald Trump
The best books on Donald Trump

Indian Express

time18-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

The best books on Donald Trump

From rebuking national leaders for not wearing suits to receiving letters that made him fall in love with one of the world's most autocratic leaders to claiming to have negotiated a ceasefire between India and Pakistan over the 'centuries old' dispute over Kashmir, Donald Trump has done it all in a short span of time into his second term. The 45th and 47th (and he insists he was the 46th one as well) President of the United States of America is seldom far from the spotlight. Here are some books that offer a glimpse into the most powerful man in the world: Those who want to know how Donald Trump works in the White House will be caught between two trilogies — the highly controversial Fire and Fury (which Trump tried to stop from being published), Siege and Landslide, by Michael Wolff; and Fear, Rage and Peril by the legendary Bob Woodward, who was part of the Woodward-Bernstein team whose All the President's Men brought down the Nixon administration. We will keep it simple: while Wolff's work covers a lot of Trump's personal life and is likely to shock you more deeply, Woodward's work is more organised and objective, although it too does not portray Trump in a flattering light (if that were indeed possible). What's more, Woodward's style of writing revolves around conversations which he writes in direct speech, which makes his books much easier to read. The books actually read like a blend between a Tom Clancy thriller and Ripley's Believe It or Not – Fear actually begins with Trump's associates actually hiding a document from the US President to ensure that he does not sign it (it would have ended the special treaty between US and its ally South Korea if he had!), Rage revolves around Trump's (mis)handling of the COVID situation, his impending impeachment and yes, you get references to the letters sent by North Korea's Kim Jong Un. 'I got a very beautiful letter from Kim Jong Un yesterday,' Trump tells reporters, adding 'I would love to give it to you. I really would. Maybe – maybe sometime I will.' Peril, the final instalment of the trilogy (co authored by Robert Costa), covers the final days of Trump's first administration, including his attempts to overturn the 2020 election results, and also covers Joe Biden's campaign. These are all big books, spanning well over 400 pages each, but you will race through them, with a sense of shock and awe! Unlike Wolff, Woodward does not look too closely at Trump's domestic life, but his style of narration leaves us with a very carefully etched image of the President, often in his own words. One can even read the interviews with Trump on which Woodward based his book in The Trump Tapes. Knowing Woodward, we are reasonably sure that he will be writing more books on Trump, but at this time, if you want to read a book on Trump's surprising re-election, Michael Wolff's All or Nothing is easily the best option. Its revelations about Trump's strained relationship with Melania Trump have already stirred controversy and White House Communications Director Michael Cheung has denounced Wolff as a 'lying bag of s**'. We are not surprised. A honorable mention also needs to be made of The Divider by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser, which covers Trump's first term in office in almost alarming detail, even narrating how his hair is arranged (a 'three-step process') and cemented with TRESemme' TRES TWO hair spray (extra hold), a can of which is carried by an aide everywhere the President goes. One also gets to know his obsession with getting photographed at eye-level and why he loves holding conferences outdoors! If you want to know the complete Donald Trump story from the very beginning, then you will have to choose between two meticulously researched books: Lucky Loser by Russ Buettner and Susanne Craig, and Confidence Man by Maggie Haberman. If we had to pick one, we would go with Confidence Man, in which Haberman dismantles the Trump myth, beginning from his claim of how he realised 'I don't want to be made anybody's sucker' when he saw an engineer not being given credit for building a bridge during its inauguration on a day when 'the rain was coming down for hours'. Haberman points out that not only did the engineer get a round of applause from the crowd, but that it was also a sunny day. As the book traces Trump's rise, Haberman literally unravels the mythos Trump has built around himself, revealing a person who is prone to act at the spur of the moment, frequently (sometimes fortunately) forgets things and is utterly obsessed with himself and the spotlight, generally both together. He even wanted to be a Hollywood star. Whereas Wolff and Woodward's work show Trump in an often-brutal, narcissistic light, Haberman reveals that Trump was capable of being utterly charming, and often surprised first time visitors to the White House with his humour and concern. 'The all-capitalized tweets that projected anger were sometimes sent while he was laughing about the same topic,' she writes. Confidence Man's detailed and objective narration makes it the perfect book to read about Trump, although you do not get the intensity of Trump in the White House that Woodward's trilogy delivers. Lucky Loser is a good read too, but we think Haberman tells the better story. Has any world leader used Twitter as effectively as Donald Trump? The US President has used the social network to announce major decisions (including the recent ceasefire between India and Pakistan) and to rain invective on his enemies and rivals. And yet he was not always like this. Peter Oborne traces Trump's Twitter journey in How Trump Thinks: His Tweets and the Birth of a New Political Language, starting with his first tweet on 4 May, 2009, announcing that he would be appearing on the David Letterman show to his bombastic use of the medium to get this message through as he raced to the White House, analysing key tweets in detail. Unfortunately, the book ends in 2017, well before Musk took over Twitter and also emerged as Trump's biggest ally. We would all love an update of this one, but in the meantime, this is still a must-read for all those interested in communication strategy and of course, in Donald Trump.

Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner refused to sign memo saying Trump was not antisemitic, book says
Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner refused to sign memo saying Trump was not antisemitic, book says

Yahoo

time22-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner refused to sign memo saying Trump was not antisemitic, book says

Donald Trump's Jewish daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, refused to sign a statement saying Trump was not antisemitic, according to a new book by the veteran Trump tell-all author Michael Wolff. 'As he kept seeming to be incapable of offering absolute support for Israel in the wake of October 7,' Wolff writes, referring to the deadly 2023 attacks by Hamas, 'Trump, not for the first time, turned to Jared for Jewish cover, explicitly asking him and Ivanka for a public endorsement. 'As Trump had continued to waffle, the Washington Post, the campaign understood, was working on a piece that would recycle all the language Trump had variously used over the years, which, on its face, might certainly sound antisemitic. Kushner kept dodging on the formal endorsement of his father-in-law. The campaign then tried to settle for merely a statement from him that his father-in-law was not antisemitic.' According to Wolff, Kushner finally said: 'No, Ivanka and I aren't going to do that. We're not going to go and put our names on something and get in the middle of things. That's just not what we're going to do this time.' Kushner and Ivanka Trump were senior advisers to Trump during his first presidency, from 2017 to 2021. But they kept their distance after his attempt to overturn his 2020 electoral defeat to Joe Biden culminated in his supporters' January 6 attack on Congress. The couple have not taken up roles in his second administration after he won back the presidency in November at the expense of former vice-president Kamala Harris, though Kushner has been linked to Trump's controversial plans to depopulate and redevelop the Gaza strip after Israel's relentless assault in response to 7 October. Wolff's book, All or Nothing: How Trump Recaptured America, is his fourth on the president. The new volume was formally confirmed this week, shortly ahead of its US publication on Tuesday. The Guardian obtained a copy. Wolff's first Trump book, Fire and Fury, was released in 2018 and sold millions as Trump tried to block it, kicking off a lucrative rush of Trump-focused books that has shown new signs of life since he won re-election. Wolff followed Fire and Fury with Siege and Landslide. Excerpts from All or Nothing have been published in Vanity Fair and the Daily Beast, the latter detailing what Wolff claims is Melania Trump's 'hatred' for her husband. Announcing All or Nothing, publisher Crown said: 'Wolff's thesis in his 18 months of covering the campaign was that the establishment would destroy Trump, or Trump would destroy the establishment. All or Nothing is Wolff's panoramic and intimate picture of that battle … from indictments, to trials, to assassination attempts, to the humiliation and defenestration of a sitting president, to Trump's staggering victory.' Last November, as Wolff wrote the book, a group of Trump aides including his chief of staff, Susie Wiles, said: 'A number of us have received inquiries from the disgraced author Michael Wolff, whose previous work can only be described as fiction. He is a known peddler of fake news who routinely concocts situations, conversations, and conclusions that never happened. As a group, we have decided not to respond to his bad faith inquiries, and we encourage others to completely disregard whatever nonsense he eventually publishes. Consider this our blanket response to whatever he writes.' On Friday, the Trump White House's communications director, Steven Cheung, told the Beast: 'Michael Wolff is a lying sack of shit and has been proven to be a fraud. 'He routinely fabricates stories originating from his sick and warped imagination, only possible because he has a severe and debilitating case of Trump Derangement Syndrome that has rotted his peanut-sized brain.' Among other moments in All or Nothing sure to be widely discussed, Wolff reports that Trump demanded to know 'what the fuck is wrong with' Elon Musk, the world's richest person who became a key campaign backer, and called JD Vance, the vice-presidential pick over whom Wolff says Trump had grave doubts, 'shifty, very shifty'. Describing a Trump rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in October, where Trump survived an assassination attempt in July, Wolff writes: 'And Elon is here, waiting when [Trump's team] arrive[s], which is cause for a moment of consternation … Elon! Next only to Trump, there is Elon.' Saying aides viewed Musk as 'a new, overwhelming, and discordant presence in the campaign', generating 'an ever-rising tide of bewildering, if not opaque, requests, orders, and recommendations', Wolff said aides thought Musk had 'elevated the Trump campaign in his own mind to a personal mission and religious cause', while 'the Trump circle' was 'already anticipating the earth shaking when he and Trump invariably f[e]ll out. 'When they arrive, Elon – wandering about by himself, with only a thin layer of assistants or security – is hungry. This causes a kerfuffle and results in uncertainty over how to attend to him. Someone produces a bag of pretzel sticks. 'The suggestion is made that JD is here and would love to speak to him. Musk, sitting down and eating his pretzel sticks, politely declines: 'I've really no interest in speaking to a vice-president.' 'Later, called onstage, with no one having any idea what he might say, Musk bounds up and, suddenly – in Mick Jagger style, prancing and jumping – becomes the headline, his T-shirt rising far above his midriff. 'What the fuck is wrong with this guy?' says a bewildered Trump. 'And why doesn't his shirt fit?' Elsewhere, Wolff describes Trump's extensive second thoughts about Vance, in one instance reportedly described in a phone conversation with an unnamed confidant. 'Yeah. What the fuck is with that name-change stuff?' Trump is depicted as saying. 'How many name changes has he had? That's shifty, that's very shifty. That's my staff fucking up. They know what I think about people changing their names. I think it's shifty. And they didn't tell me.' Vance was born James Donald Bowman. After his parents split up he was adopted by his new stepfather and renamed James David Hamel. Long known as 'J.D.', he later changed to his surname to Vance, after the beloved grandmother of whom he writes in Hillbilly Elegy, his bestselling book from 2016. He eventually dropped the periods, to become 'JD'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store