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528 pages, Hardcover
First published September 17, 2024
Good things happened to Donald Trump. He did not earn most of those good things. He was born, he was discovered by a revolutionary television producer, and he was pushed into an investment against his will. And from those three bits of good luck came the equivalent today of more than $1.5 billion. That sort of tailwind could paper over a litany of failure and still fund a lavish life, and there is no evidence that in 50 years of labor Donald Trump added to his lucky fortunes. He would have been better off betting on the stock market than on himself.The following except from early in the book says that Trump characteristics apparent early in his career were much the same as in his later political life.
Our reporting shows that the character traits that would become most identified with Donald Trump during his presidency were set in his early twenties through his relationship with his father. His instinct to fight everything without regard to cost or time or further reputational harm, to file lawsuits more like an angry trust funder than a businessman weighing risks and reward. His de facto definition of loyalty as a one-way street. His tendency to see himself as a victim of jealousy and unfairness. His belief that his instincts, which typically meant his desired reality, were superior to any reasoned analysis by experts. All of it emerges in his relationship with a doting, if cold, father.The following is a NY Times articles about one of Trump's business failures and explains a continuing grudge he has against Columbia University.