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Madam Speaker: Nancy Pelosi and the Lessons of Power
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About This Book
Featuring more than 150 exclusive interviews with those who know her best—and a series of in-depth, news-making interviews with Pelosi herself—MADAM SPEAKER is unprecedented in the scope of its exploration of Nancy Pelosi's remarkable life and of her indelible impact on American politics. Before she was Nancy Pelosi, she was Nancy D'Alesandro. Her father was a big-city mayor and her mother his political organizer; when she encouraged her young daughter to become a nun, Nancy told her mother that being a priest sounded more appealing. She didn't begin running for office until she was forty-six years old, her five children mostly out of the nest. With that, she found her calling. Nancy Pelosi has lived on the cutting edge of the revolution in both women's roles and in the nation's movement to a fiercer and more polarized politics. She has established herself as a crucial friend or formidable foe to U.S. presidents, a master legislator, and an indefatigable political warrior. She took on the Democratic establishment to become the first female Speaker of the House, then battled rivals on the left and right to consolidate her power. She has soared in the sharp-edged inside game of politics, though she has struggled in the outside game—demonized by conservatives, second-guessed by progressives, and routinely underestimated by nearly everyone. All of this was preparation for the most historic challenge she would ever face, at a time she had been privately planning her retirement. When Donald Trump was elected to the White House, Nancy Pelosi became the Democratic counterpart best able to stand up to the disruptive president and to get under his skin. The battle between Trump and Pelosi, chronicled in this book with behind-the-scenes details and revelations, stands to be the titanic political struggle of our time.
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Reviews
"[Page] dives deep into the transformative moments in Pelosi's early political career that are so well known a biographer might be tempted to skim over them ..."
"Madam Speaker makes clear that the speakership was not a job Pelosi spent a lifetime craving but it is definitely a role she wanted and, more importantly, mastered."
"Ultimately, Page doesn't quite break into Pelosi's inner world, and she doesn't quite get into what, exactly, about Pelosi inspires such vitriol on the right and the far left alike."
"Thorough as Madam Speaker is, a reader may wish for more insight into what Pelosi – notably private – called her distaste for "'personal, personal things.' Page was not always able to draw Pelosi out, and some prickly exchanges between author and subject are interesting in their own right – especially when an 'openly agitated' speaker pushes back on questions about 'the Squad' ..."
"The author examines Pelosi's congressional and leadership record in detail and offers insight into the Speaker's relationship with her party, especially newer progressive members of the Democratic Caucus ..."
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