Book Review: Renegade: The Making Of A President
by Richard Wolffe
Publication Date: Jun 02, 2009
List Price: $26.00
Format: Hardcover, 368 pages
Classification: Nonfiction
ISBN13: 9780307463128
Imprint: Crown
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Parent Company: Bertelsmann
Book Reviewed by Kam Williams
’This is the making of a president, witnessed from a front-row seat, as it unfolded from its first day to its last. With the help of more than a dozen one-on-one interviews with the candidate and then president’as well as scores of sessions with his trusted aides, friends and family’this account is an attempt to translate the enigma of Barack Obama, to answer the questions of who he is and what ay behind his rise from freshman senator to forty-fourth president of the United States of America.’
’Excerpted from Chapter One, ’Change’ (pages 5-6)
The election of
Barack Obama
has spawned a cottage industry of books about the President and
the First Lady. Many of these publications have merely been
’take the money and run’ rip-offs rushed to print in a
calculated attempt to cash-in on the collective euphoria about
the historic moment. One author even freely admits in the
introduction of her tome that she never even spoke to either the
Obamas or to any of their relatives, friends or colleagues. But
that didn't prevent her from quickly putting out a coffee
table-type keepsake.
People who were patient enough to wait for a quality opus will
find themselves handsomely rewarded by Renegade, a recounting of
Obama’s ascension to the White House by Richard Wolffe, a
reporter who was assigned by Newsweek Magazine to cover the 2008
campaign from beginning to end. Over those 21 months, he enjoyed
unusual access to the candidate, since it was Barack himself who
came up with the idea of Wolfe’s chronicling his rise to the
presidency for posterity, ala The Making of the President, the
Teddy White’s classic about JFK.
Renegade revisits all of the high and low points of the campaign
trail, allowing the reader to get inside Obama’s head at
critical moments, like after the win in Iowa, the loss in New
Hampshire and during the agonizing days of the Reverend Wright
controversy. We also learn when Obama identified Hillary
Clinton’s Achilles Heel, and when and why he decided to
neutralize her as a threat by appointing her as his Secretary of
State.
Furthermore, Wolffe discusses the Obamas’ early years together,
when Barack’s ’restless political ambitions took their marriages
and finances to the brink.’ Michelle essentially supported the
family during that period until he finally agreed to take what
’was supposed to be his last shot at politics,’ a run for the
U.S. Senate. Miraculously, ’He burst onto the national scene
with a single speech, trounced the opposition, and secured a
handsome book contract.’
And the rest is history, and it’s all recounted here in vivid
detail.