Not to be dramatic but this book is giving me alternate timeline rage 💙
Reading 107 Days after living through the emotional whiplash of the 2024 election felt a bit like reopening an old wound. Seriously, experiencing the unique genre known as political grief is sobering. At times, this was genuinely difficult to get through—not because the book itself is weak, but because it forces you to revisit what that moment felt like. The disbelief. The anger. The lingering sense of how did we end up here?
This political memoir chronicles the whirlwind final stretch of the 2024 presidential race, offering insight into the strategy, pressure, and decisions behind the scenes. What stood out most to me wasn’t just the campaign mechanics but the tone Harris maintains throughout the book. There’s a clear commitment to public service, to policy, and to a vision of the country rooted in stability and progress. Seeing those goals laid out so plainly only made the election results feel more surreal. WE COULD HAVE HAD THIS. Alas, every chapter was just me whispering “we really fumbled the bag” to the entire country while also being super impressed with her tact, because, I personally believe in “when they go low, you go to hell.”
As a matter of fact, one question I kept returning to—both during the campaign and while reading—was why Harris didn’t go lower when her opponent had no problem doing exactly that. Why hold back? Why play by rules that clearly weren’t being respected on the other side?
The answer that emerges through the book is simple, even if it’s frustrating… she refused to become what she was running against. She’s better than him. Better than that.
That restraint, that commitment to a certain standard of leadership, reads almost old-fashioned in today’s political climate where government has been made a mockery. But it’s also exactly what makes her stand out as a public servant. The book doesn’t pretend to have every answer, and in many places it acknowledges the uncertainty and disappointment many supporters still feel. In that way it feels less like a victory lap and more like a reflection on a moment that could have gone very differently. And yes, this could be viewed as a victory because make no mistake that what Kamala Harris achieved in those 107 days leading up to the election is nothing short of history. Brilliant and trailblazing.
What comes through strongest in 107 Days is Harris’s resilience. The campaign may have ended, but the sense of purpose behind it clearly hasn’t. Whether or not the future brings another run, the book serves as a reminder of what principled leadership can look like—even in defeat.
And if history eventually proves some of us right about what was lost in that election, well… some phrases really are timeless.
I told you so.
I know she doesn’t find those four words beautiful, but I for one, have no problem saying it.
5 stars. A reflective, sometimes painful but ultimately compelling look inside a historic campaign. I read this like a historian from a doomed civilization and the phrase “this is why we can’t have nice things” has never felt more accurate. For readers still processing the 2024 election, 107 Days reads less like closure and more like a reminder of the leadership many of us are still hoping for and can one day have again.