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View from the East Wing: A Memoir

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Jill Biden became First Lady at a complicated moment in US history, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and in the shadow of the January 6 insurrection. These were the circumstances under which she set up office in the East Wing, where she hit the ground running. Throughout her husband’s presidency, Jill remained a tireless advocate for her causes, including women’s health, military families, vaccine awareness, cancer initiatives, and education. She made history as the first-ever First Lady to hold an outside job while her husband was in office, continuing to work as a professor at a nearby community college. Yet all the while, she saw herself as an ordinary woman living an extraordinary life.

In View from the East Wing, Jill shares her White House experiences for the first time, in her own words. She reflects on the Biden presidency and its impact on her family. She brings you behind the scenes, from Camp David to Air Force One, from grading papers in the Rose Garden to witnessing the abrupt end of her husband’s bid for reelection. This is the story of a woman dedicated to her roles as a wife, mother, grandmother, teacher—and First Lady of the United States.

288 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 2, 2026

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About the author

Jill Biden

8 books150 followers
Jill Biden, former First Lady of the United States, is the New York Times bestselling author of Where the Light Enters and her children’s books Don’t Forget, God Bless Our Troops, Joey: The Story of Joe Biden, and Willow the White House Cat. She served as Second Lady of the United States from 2009 to 2017. As First Lady, she advocated for military families, the Biden Cancer Moonshot, community colleges, and women’s health research—and maintained a full-time career teaching English as a community college professor. She chairs the Milken Institute’s Women’s Health Network. A mother and grandmother—and now great-grandmother—she lives with her husband, former President Joe Biden, in Wilmington, Delaware, with their cat, Willow.

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5 stars
620 (21%)
4 stars
1,045 (36%)
3 stars
952 (33%)
2 stars
213 (7%)
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36 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 393 reviews
394 reviews1 follower
June 4, 2026
Read for book club. This was legit all over the place. The format wasn’t chronological or thematic it just randomly jumped from one topic to another. And dude it was so slow and boring. Read more like a travel log and will probably only sell because she is a former First Lady and not because it is actual well written.
Profile Image for Summer.
616 reviews489 followers
June 27, 2026
Dr. Jill Biden is such an inspiration to me. Ignore the fact that she's married to a very public figure; she deserves so much more notoriety for her advocacy, public service, and passion for teaching.

In her recent memoir, View from the East Wing, Dr. Biden gives readers a behind the scenes glance of what life is like for a first lady.

Dr. Biden recounts where her prior work, Where the Light Enters, left off and she covers life from 2019 to the present. She discusses instances from her personal life such as what it was like losing her stepson, having her other stepson suffer from drug addiction and recover in the public eye, and so much more. Reader's get a glimpse at the decision making during her husband's tenure as well as her reactions to certain events. Jill also discusses current happenings and recounts how she dealt with her husband's health and his cancer diagnosis.

Written with such brilliance, grace, and honest candor after finishing View from the East Wing I came to admire Dr. Biden so much more. I loved learning how she maintained her career while advocating for the causes she's passionate about, and supporting her loved ones as a wife, mother, and grandmother.
With its themes of mental health, grief, and family, View from the East Wing is a must read for all who are curious about the former first family.

View from the East Wing by Jill Biden: A Memoir was published on June 2 so it's available now. Many thanks to Gallery Books for the gifted copy!
Profile Image for Elyse.
242 reviews2 followers
June 6, 2026
I started to read this book for the Sharon McMahon book club. I thought I'd enjoy it as I've read multiple memoirs the past few years and it's become a genre I enjoy. I admire women who are able to share their journey balancing well self-disclosure and insight yet not telling others' stories that might intersect with theirs (including their spouse, their children, etc.).

This book misses that mark. It was bland, it was self-focused, and it revealed nothing that I couldn't get from reading the news articles about Jill Biden back at the time. She admitted she and Joe Biden avoided discussing multiple issues (like mental health struggles, addiction, etc.) and this desire to avoid hard issues continues into her book. As a therapist, this avoidance, glossing over hard issues, and sanitizing controversial decisions (like the Afghanistan withdrawal and a relatives' public addiction struggle) is frustrating and leads to an unsatisfying read. When you learn nothing new in reading a memoir, what's the point of reading it?

I don't need salacious details, but I would love to hear that she and her husband really wrestled with issues that many Americans wrestle with.

Disappointed.
14 reviews2 followers
June 3, 2026
This Memoir Delivers Cheers and Tears

For decades, Dr. Jill and Senator/VP/President Joe Biden dedicated their waking hours to improving conditions and outcomes in the US and around the world. Their numerous personal and family heart aches, challenges and tragedies didn't derail them. Instead, they deepened their resolve and their empathy for others who have suffered and are suffering. And their hearts never hardened despite the cruel, merciless and unwarranted attacks on their characters.
I consider them both role models and salt of the earth human beings. I am, and always will be, glad that they represented us on the world stage for as long as they did. They continue to inspire me. So, it was impossible for me to put this book down. I read it in one sitting. It's riveting, emotional and utterly fascinating to be given the unique opportunity to inhabit Dr. Biden's mind and to vicariously experience the life she has lived. If you can put your preconceptions and your politics aside, no matter where you are on the political spectrum, you will find much to love and admire about her journey.

Profile Image for Brielle Ashford .
15 reviews
June 8, 2026
Unfortunately this was not a favorite for me — no shade to Jill. She seems like a lovely woman!

The memoir was a bit boring honestly, and often read like one very long press release chock-full of trite commentary on a litany of events that occurred during the Biden presidency. The story just lacked the intimacy and intrigue that makes a memoir great and memorable, in my opinion. However, I don’t doubt it was an authentic account, and I will note that it is written well enough and doesn’t necessarily shy away from any relevancies. It just doesn’t add much interesting context, either. Everything shared felt fairly easily assumed.

Even his pulling out of the race wasn’t expounded upon in any notable way — just emphasis on how no one around him thought he was unfit and basically the infamous debate breakdown appeared to be a random anomaly for which no one has ever discovered an explanation…
This made their team seem even more unfit to me, in retrospect, tbh. Ultimately, Jill came off to me as biased and a little head-in-the-sand about it all. No judgement though, really. I probably would be too if it were my dad, or husband. But not inspiring as a voter!

Although some details of life in the White House were charming, they didn’t quite add enough to save it. I will say my favorite details in the book were about her work at community college. She shared moving moments from her time teaching and I deeply respect that she took that on during such a chaotic and often difficult time in her life.

Having last read Michelle Obama’s memoir, I couldn’t help but compare and do recommend that one for a more intimate and comprehensive First Lady’s life and perspective.

For the record, I do assume I might enjoy Jill Biden’s first memoir more. However, after this, I’m not sure I have the confidence in her storytelling to try it.
Profile Image for Kasey Bone.
43 reviews1 follower
June 7, 2026
It feels like her ghost writer gave her a list of questions as a jumping off point, then Jill—being the endearing English professor she is—wrote a full essay for each question. Rather than weave the stories into a thematic narrative, they accidentally hit publish on the first, albeit well written, draft.
Profile Image for Allison Horrocks.
309 reviews52 followers
June 3, 2026
This book flows seamlessly from topic to topic as Jill Biden has her say about being First Lady. It’s obvious Dr. Biden has taken all her service roles seriously. In the early chapters, Biden makes it clear she’s uneasy talking about addiction & health issues. Her deliberate avoidance of difficult topics is obvious throughout this book, which is absolutely not a tell-all. There’s paragraphs filled with details about Camp David, flowers at the White House, and portrait projects. This book reads like a last attempt at assuring Americans someone cares about decorum, and I’m afraid that in June 2026, it’s already too late.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
795 reviews21 followers
June 18, 2026
I listened to this book on audio and Dr. Biden read it which was delightful. I loved how she never mentioned Trump by name-just a little snarky but why not. This was very enjoyable and I liked hearing about her years in the East Wing (RIP).
Profile Image for Jenn S.
190 reviews7 followers
June 5, 2026
Political thoughts and opinions aside, this is an easy audiobook to listen to. Jill Biden has a pleasant voice and narrates well.
The editing felt strange. In an effort to not sound like a daily diary, the timeline of this book jumps forwards and back constantly. One minute it’s the 2024 election, the next she’s Second Lady. Each anecdote is written well enough, but I’m not sure of the editing choices.


For my personal opinions— Jill Biden, as she describes herself, is from a “different time”. That lack of communication within the family likely lead to a lot of the image issues that plagued Biden’s presidency. Jill Biden notes multiple times that some things were not spoken of in their family. She toes the line of independent woman and dutiful wife, but struggles to remain centrist. She fought to be able to keep her teaching position, which she earned, but doesn’t talk to her husband about his health or her family about their son’s addiction.

She was a classy First Lady, à la Laura Bush. She used her influence when appropriate but didn’t upstage her husband in any way.

The differences in this memoir from Jake Tapper’s book and Kamala Harris’s memoir are slight, but there are definitely some rose-colored glasses being worn when writing this one.
Profile Image for Becky.
784 reviews156 followers
June 30, 2026
I very much enjoyed this easy read. I listened to some, yet read most of it.
Some readers felt it was disjointed....I never took it to be a chronological telling, many of the sections were told about specific things. Towards the 2nd 1/2 of the book it did follow a time line.

Interesting insight from Jill as a 2nd & 1st lady....Jill is a soft spoken person, she tells her story in a very gentle way & I never really picked up on any "snark".

Loved that I read this with the Sharon McMahon Governerds book group & for our lovely Zoom chat with Jill Biden
Profile Image for Katie.
423 reviews7 followers
June 10, 2026
A quick listen with some interesting perspectives and an insider’s view…and I liked listening to it in her own voice, but it was a bit scattered and there was a whole lot of discussing which designer’s dress she was wearing to which function. A portion of it read like a travel log. There was some hard things she went through but very little emotion. I guess it felt a bit guarded…but perhaps it’s a generational thing? I did find it interesting that she referred to but did not name Trump for most of the book. “His opponent”, “the former president”, etc until the section where it was the lead up to the 2024 election.
Profile Image for Abby.
47 reviews5 followers
June 9, 2026
Managed not to DNF because I wanted to have read it through for book club. This was painfully poorly written. Incohesive. Jumped around. The loosest of timelines until the last third of the book. A nice opportunity of a memoir totally squandered
Profile Image for Cole.
202 reviews73 followers
July 8, 2026
⭐️⭐️⭐️✨

Thank you Gallery Books for the #gifted copy in exchange for an honest review!

Dr. Jill Biden became First Lady at one of the most complicated moments in U.S. history: the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and in the wake of the January 6 insurrection. As she set up her office in the now demolished East Wing, she maintained her advocacy for women’s health, cancer awareness, and education. She was the first ever First Lady to maintain her outside job she continued working as a professor at a community college. She shares some of the personal moments, like the loss of Beau to cancer and Hunter’s addiction struggles, and of course the behind-the-scenes conversations about her husband dropping out of the 2024 election.

I have so much respect for Dr. Biden; I can only imagine how emotionally fraught she must be in writing about and reliving all of the hardships she experienced as First Lady. Regardless of your thoughts on her husband and his politics, it’s fascinating to hear the story of a First Lady who maintained her own career. The memoir isn’t chronological, but that does force the reader to pay extra attention to the context. I learned a lot more about her own journey and story, and gained deeper appreciation for her tireless advocacy for education. Full disclosure: I haven’t read her first memoir “Where the Light Enters: Building a Family, Discovering Myself,” which may put some of the pieces of the backstory together that otherwise felt a bit glossed over in this book. But nonetheless, it was a candid view into the East Wing; a glimpse we’ll never get again.

Reviewed as part of an #ARC from the publisher.

Read this book if you:
🎓 clap back with “it’s Dr., actually”
🍎 root for all the teachers on Abbott Elementary
💪🏻 know that Delaware is small but mighty

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Profile Image for Peyton Riddle.
26 reviews
June 12, 2026
I need more time to digest this memoir and consider why I didn’t like it, but these are my initial thoughts.

This was nearly a DNF for me. I always give memoirs 5 stars because I feel strongly about what it means to absorb someone’s lived stories. This is the first memoir I can’t review that highly.

I saw another review that said a lot of the narrative is around Biden’s commitment to her public service roles and demonstration of respect for decorum, which I’ll admit is a breath of fresh air compared to what we’re seeing in politics today. That said, it almost reads as a travel log that was pieced together haphazardly, with japes sprinkled in that read to me as “and that’s how I really felt”.

She made clear she’s very private and avoids speaking about heavy topics such as addiction and physical ailments, which she tries to overcome some in this memoir, but there is just such a strong barrier between Jill and the reader.

We are met with so much affirmative commentary about Joe’s mental and physical health and the impact of political propaganda on the Biden campaign that I ended up catching a “woe is me” vibe, which albeit is valid but also feels like a missed opportunity with her platform to impact the public positively.
Profile Image for Chriss.
157 reviews10 followers
June 15, 2026
I’ve read every First Lady’s memoir since Rosalynn Carter, except for the current one. I’m primarily a fiction reader but at some point I must have decided the First Ladies had better stories than their husbands. Rosalynn Carter, Nancy Reagan, Barbara Bush, Hillary Clinton, Laura Bush, Michelle Obama, and Jill Biden, both Republicans and Democrats. I wasn’t surprised to note that politics played a part for those who panned this book in their reviews. I was surprised though that they even read it. I enjoyed the book as I find Jill Biden down to earth and relatable. It covered a little bit of everything, life in the White House, her responsibilities as First Lady, not much on politics as we think of it, but some about her travels and other wives of heads of state that she met on those travels, her love of teaching, family and grandchildren, grief over the death of a child, another child’s struggle with addiction, the importance of her female friends and more. I listened to her narrate it on Audible in a day. Her writing style was as one might assume, that of an English teacher, so I’m not sure why there’s criticism of her writing style, it’s a memoir not a thriller, and as such I’m giving it 5 ⭐️.
Profile Image for Sally.
242 reviews
June 14, 2026
Jill Biden is a remarkable woman. She’s smart, compassionate and thoughtful, and has had so many truly incredible experiences. All of that and the fact that she’s an English professor gave me high hopes for this book. So I was surprised that it was not particularly well written and terribly organized. The timeline is all over the place. There are seemingly random swerves in thought and timeline and unconnected pieces of information, sometimes all in the same chapter. The writing is oddly stilted. It’s all written in first person, but it seems a little stiff. Only the last couple of chapters seem warm and authentic. Her experiences are interesting and unique, but not conveyed particularly well.
Profile Image for Kira Simmons Murphy.
24 reviews1 follower
June 19, 2026
I listened to this, doubt I would have gotten through it reading it. I am reading it for a book club. I appreciated she never said the name of a certain political opponent. I found the most sincere parts to be the ones where she talked about teaching and appreciated her highlighting educators. I respect that she did keep working and maintained her own identity. However, to me most of this read like a resume and some of it I just wasn't buying, it felt like political spin.
Profile Image for Clay H.
63 reviews
June 8, 2026
Regardless of the 2024 election and one's feelings about Biden's campaign end, the book describes interesting behind the scenes moments from the Biden-Harris administration. The book describes a more intimate look at the presidency and woman who has accomplished a lot in life.
Profile Image for Lynn 🌟.
503 reviews13 followers
June 9, 2026
I like doctor biden and I was looking forward to this book. I'm stating this because I also want to say it was dullish. That being said, I think you should read it.

.
Someone mentions that it jumps around a lot in timelines, and it does, and it was a little annoying. I read a lot of biographies, and that's kind of a new ish fing, the deaf been doing more and more, but I feel the chapters were too small in this book for that to happen.You just felt like you were getting whippedlash jumping between timelines so quickly. But that being said, I really do think you should read it
Profile Image for Whitney.
820 reviews28 followers
June 10, 2026
It's always fascinating to see first hand experiences of those who are in the government. My favorite line was "We are ordinary people living an extraordinary life."
22 reviews2 followers
June 21, 2026
Read with Sharon McMahon’s book club. I love a memoir and really wanted to enjoy this but… didn’t.

In a “cobbler’s kids going barefoot” way, I was surprised that the work of a creative writing professor would be so uninspiring. I think glimpses of experiences are fine in a memoir, but there’s no common thread to the chapters, no common style through the book, just assemblies of paragraphs that left me with little interest in finishing the book other than hating to put anything on the DNF shelf. The lack of any back-cover reviewer blurbs - just an excerpt in Mrs Biden’s words - was, in retrospect a tell.

As another reviewer noted, not much here that couldn’t be pulled from other sources, which defeats the point of writing your memoir.
Profile Image for Natalie.
101 reviews1 follower
June 7, 2026
3.5 ⭐ It was fine. I have a little bit of a difficult time with books written by those in politics because they always feel a little PR-motivated. It was interesting to hear Jill's perspective on things, particularly to hear about the dynamic she has with Joe.
Profile Image for Danielle.
62 reviews2 followers
June 4, 2026
This book was so interesting to me (you know i love a political memoir). I’ve always admired the Bidens and it was fascinating to get a BTS look at their lives, both during their time in the White House and in the years leading up to the presidency. This story felt really personal and genuine in the way it was about Jill the wife, mom, grandma, teacher rather than Jill former FLOTUS. Bonus points for the audiobook being narrated by Jill herself, her voice was lovely to listen to and made it so easy to devour this one in less than 48 hours.
Profile Image for Lynn.
1,280 reviews208 followers
June 6, 2026
I wanted to like this book more, but the further I got into it, the more disenchanted I became.

I have always enjoyed reading about First Ladies, knowing I could never do what they do. I have admired Jill Biden as a Second Lady and as a First Lady, especially given that she continued to teach while in both roles. This book is her truth as she lived it. Unfortunately she comes across as very self serving, with a lot of justification for things that she and President Biden were criticized for, especially after that disastrous debate. Her love of family, teaching and country come through clearly. The loss of Beau, and Hunter’s addiction and legal troubles are heartbreaking. She narrates the audiobook and you can tell when she is smiling and when she is emotional.

The writing is almost saccharine and the narrative jumps around in time, making it feel less cohesive. At times it felt like the descriptions of fancy dinners and couture clothing were fillers to expand the book. There is also a lot of repetition in describing events, since the book is chronologically out of order. I did enjoy that she hardly mentions DJT by name, using euphemisms like “Joe’s opponent” or “the current resident.” She’s pretty scathing about Melania, deservedly so.

Probably the thing that disappointed and annoyed me the most, almost to the point of anger, is when she is describing the events of October 7 and its aftermath. Several times she mentions what was happening in Gaza in the aftermath of the attack on Israel, and heaps praise on Jose Andreas and his World Central Kitchen for their efforts to feed the Gazans, but she never, ever mentions the agony of the hostages who were kept in the underground tunnels of Gaza by Hamas. She mentions how devastated she was when World Central Kitchen aid workers were killed in an air strike, but never mentions how the IDF was trying to rescue the hostages. Her unspoken words said volumes to me. She apparently isn’t the ally I thought she was and I lost some respect for her because of this. I get that this is a “me” problem, but 10/7 opened my eyes to how much the world really doesn’t care about what happens to Jews.

The book is interesting in a way, but I’m not sure I would recommend it.
Profile Image for Christie Jones.
Author 2 books8 followers
July 2, 2026
4 stars. Was a book club pick. Easy to read. If you don’t like the Bidens I don’t recommend. Did have some interesting anecdotes.
Profile Image for Krystle Gascoigne.
11 reviews1 follower
June 10, 2026
A good memoir of life in the White House as First Lady. RIP East Wing.
Profile Image for Lisa.
20 reviews
June 4, 2026
Dr. Jill Biden’s soft yet steady voice brings her story to life with a tender honesty that feels both intimate and inspiring. Her reflections on her time in the White House are shared with a vulnerability that never feels performative. Just deeply human. Listening to her felt like being offered a quiet, comforting balm. I loved learning more about her experiences, and the audiobook was so beautifully delivered that I can’t imagine taking it in any other way. Highly recommend.
Profile Image for Laura.
808 reviews73 followers
July 1, 2026
This was more interesting than I expected, but there are no huge revelations. Honestly, I give her credit for her restraint. I think she is someone who doesn’t forget those who inflict harm on the people she loves, even if she, in some cases, finds a measure of forgiveness.
Profile Image for Chelsey Pinto.
163 reviews
June 18, 2026
Poised. Loving. Reserved.

The way Dr. Jill Biden loves Joe, her family, her country, and her career both as an english professor and as the Second and then First Lady rings so evident in her memoir. She herself narrates the audiobook and her Pennsylvania accent is particularly pronounced when she is reminiscing on her childhood, its sweet. I loved learning about her first date with Joe, or how she fell just as in love with his two sons. I loved learning about how she was firm about having her own career and her own money, even from a young age, and had to keep that line when she was First Lady - preach it, sister! Can you imagine going to your college writing class and having Dr. Jill Biden as your professor?

The book enumerates so many of the dignitaries, outings, and events that Jill Biden managed in her time as First and Second lady, it was exhausting just to read about, and she never complains. Heavy lies the crown and Jill Biden was raised right, knowing her position of supreme privilege and trying to use her political prowess for good. Especially for often overlooked causes - women's health, mental health, and education. I learned of a few programs that both she and Joe championed while in office that I had never even heard of! ARPA-H what??

The final chapters of the book were a little daunting, like pouring salt on an open wound, especially after reading Kamala Harris's 107 Days so recently. The loss after loss after loss. I'm still bitter. Jill does well to show her disappointment, but she is never devastated beyond hope or repair.

Often throughout the book, she circles back to her late son Bo, and how his loss seems to color so many parts of her life. I think Jill does well to illustrate her grief, and try to be more open about it. It touches upon everything, you are never far from it. You must walk with it, there is no way around. And still, joy. I loved her ending sentence, which makes the book feel like a giant love letter to Joe. What an adorable couple, they don't make 'em like that any more.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 393 reviews