Given the timing of this memoir’s release, I should have known better than to expect a truly compelling and rich narrative from one of America’s most powerful female politicians.
It’s not that it was particularly bad. It just wasn’t particularly good, either. Pelosi definitely delivers some excellent political history with chapters dedicated to Pelosi’s initial attraction to and subsequent ascent through the political sphere, the utterly unnecessary destruction of Afghanistan and Iraq by our government in an overreaction to punish whomever they could for 9/11, her work with helping to keep the Taiwanese people free from PRC oppression, as well as the 2008 economic recession, finally making universal healthcare a reality for tens of millions of Americans, and of course, the January 6th insurrection.
What it seeks to be lacking, in my opinion, is a genuine reflection on the entirety of her career, and a deeper outlook and explanation of the decisions she made and why she made them to the readers of this book. At times she got into very personal subjects, especially when she kicked the story off with the assault on her poor husband by a lunatic with a hammer.
The fact that MAGA would joke about this is truly sickening, but then again, it’s not as if we don’t all already know that many of them will say the most vile things ever, without any sense of compassion for a human being who, as his older age, is still recovering years after the attack. I appreciated hearing the story from Nancy on this horrendous incident from her life, and her heartfelt concern and worry was legitimate during this part of her story.
However, there are way too many other sections of the book where she repeatedly stresses how much she loves democracy and America, how she puts the children first above all else, and other kinds of mostly meaningless platitudes which all politicians will say to appeal to the American people - although I don’t question her sincerity, it just gets to be too much and doesn’t add any real depth to the material in the way someone in power would clearly hope for it to do.
Overall, I don’t *regret* reading it… but I do wish she’d perhaps waited until her retirement and published a more comprehensive, more honest account of her life story, one where she doesn’t need to worry about positive and negative implications on politics.
It does sound like she’s working on a follow up to this book, and I’ll definitely check it out… I just hope it stays on track a bit better with the emotional presentation of her career, rather than vacillating between tiresome positive quotes to serious retellings of historically groundbreaking events. It goes from a bit too over the top (while not sounding entirely genuine) to describing events very well yet with seemingly little mention of the personal importance of this events to her.
I suppose what I’m really trying to say here, is that the memoir seems very rushed, and I know she can do better. And as mentioned previously, I’m eagerly awaiting that day. 3 stars; rather average but a good read nonetheless.