by Mark Halperin (Find this book)
Michiko Kakutani, "The New York Times"
"Those hungry for political
news will read "Double Down" for the scooplets and insidery glimpses it
serves up about the two campaigns, and the clues it offers about the
positioning already going on among Republicans and Democrats for 2016
... The book testifies to its authors' energetic legwork and insider
access... creating a novelistic narrative that provides a you-are-there
immediacy... They succeed in taking readers interested in the
backstabbing and backstage maneuvering of the 2012 campaign behind the
curtains, providing a tactile... sense of what it looked like from the
inside."
In their runaway bestseller "Game Change," Mark Halperin
and John Heilemann captured the full drama of Barack Obama's improbable,
dazzling victory over the Clintons, John McCain, and Sarah Palin. With
the same masterly reporting, unparalleled access, and narrative skill,
"Double Down" picks up the story in the Oval Office, where the president
is beset by crises both inherited and unforeseen--facing defiance from
his political foes, disenchantment from the voters, disdain from the
nation's powerful money machers, and dysfunction within the West Wing.
As 2012 looms, leaders of the Republican Party, salivating over Obama's
political fragility, see a chance to wrest back control of the White
House--and the country. So how did the Republicans screw it up? How did
Obama survive the onslaught of super PACs and defy the predictions of a
one-term presidency? "Double Down" follows the gaudy carnival of GOP
contenders--ambitious and flawed, famous and infamous, charismatic and
cartoonish--as Mitt Romney, the straitlaced, can-do, gaffe-prone
multimillionaire from Massachusetts, scraped and scratched his way to
the nomination.
"Double Down" exposes blunders, scuffles, and
machinations far beyond the klieg lights of the campaign trail: Obama
storming out of a White House meeting with his high command after
accusing them of betrayal. Romney's mind-set as he made his
controversial "47 percent" comments. The real reasons New Jersey
governor Chris Christie was never going to be Mitt's running mate. The
intervention held by the president's staff to rescue their boss from
political self-destruction. The way the tense detente between Obama and
Bill Clinton morphed into political gold. And the answer to one of the
campaign's great mysteries--how did Clint Eastwood end up performing
Dada dinner theater at the Republican convention?
In" Double Down,"
Mark Halperin and John Heilemann take the reader into back rooms and
closed-door meetings, laying bare the secret history of the 2012
campaign for a panoramic account of an election that was as hard fought
as it was lastingly consequential. -- Publisher Marketing
"So Many Books...So Little Time"
Some of the Library's newly-acquired books that have been highlighted on Colonie's Cable Channel 17 show called "So Many Books..So Little Time."
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