I enjoyed presidential candidate Amy Klobuchar's book. She presents her ideas and accomplishments in a casual, easy-to-read style. It is almost as if Amy is sitting across the table talking. To me, she also comes across this way in television appearances. In my family, we joke that she may be a distant relative; it is possible, but probably unlikely.
Although the book was published in 2015, many of the issues Klobuchar comments on are still relevant today. (And what does that say about legislative progress?) I do not know if Klobuchar has a chance a "winning" the Democratic party's nomination to be its presidential candidate in 2020, but to me her views (and her selling of them in this book) generally make a lot of sense. We'll see....
"Klobuchar means 'hatmaker' in Slovene, indicating that at some point in the centuries past, my ancestors were in the haberdashery business, a risky trade back then since they called the 'mad hatter' made for a reason. Until the process was banned in the first half of the twentieth century, the mercury used to manufacture felt hats would often lead to insanity." (19)
"On northern Minnesota's Iron Range - a vast landscape of forest and lakes, rich in iron ore and ethnic culture- my great-grandparents found not just fellow Slovenians and Serbs and Croatians, but also Finns, Swedes, Norwegians, Poles, and Bulgarians. They had all traveled thousands of miles in hopes of finding a job, and they'd heard that northeastern Minnesota 'looked just like home.' That was something of an exaggeration, since in its early years, the Range was mostly a collection of frontier shantytowns, complete with brothels and illegal stills." (19)
When asking her father if a Tim Klobuchar is his son: "Then he explained some distant second-cousin relationship to our family involving a lot of Mikes and Marys and Johns." (132)
"In Ely, where my dad grew up, they've always said 'claw-BUTCH-er.' But my dad and a lot of people elsewhere on the Iron Range (where there's a lot of Klobuchars) say 'klo-bah-CHAR'. Meanwhile, mos of the people in the rest of the state (including my mom when I was growing up) say 'klo-bah-SHAR', which is the way I pronounce it. Whenever the pronunciation issue came up during campaigns, I would always say, 'There isn't a big difference between CHAR and SHAR, but there is between me and my opponent. I don't care how you say it, so long as you vote for me." (190)
"I had long suffered from what's known as dysplasia, which means that one of my hip sockets was not in the correct position." (208)
"...But maybe some of the credit should go to my lucky red suit coat, which had been given to me by the wife of a moderate Minnesota Republican legislator. I'd seen her wearing the coat at an event, and afterward I'd told her that I liked it and asked where she got it. (The woman took it off and gave it to Amy.)...I may have been the first United States Senator to wear a hand-me-down on Meet the Press." (214)
"How did my new classmate and knight in shining armor, Senator Bob Casey, end up carrying that yogurt in his coat pocket into the National Cathedral?" (226)
"Over the past few years it's become apparent to me that the senators who seem to have the most difficult time adjusting to the congressional gridlock and lack of strategic planning - the ones who get the most frustrated by the stop-everything-in-its-tracks mentality- tend to be those who used to run something. They once knew the thrill and reward of making a decision, implementing it, and measuring the results over the long term." (260)
"And as David Brooks points out in his book The Road to Character, a 'moderate' is not always someone who takes a position halfway between two opposing views, nor does the term necessarily mean someone who is moderate in temperament. What truly defines moderation in politics is instead a philosophy 'based on an awareness of the inevitability of confict...and the idea that things do not fit neatly together." (286)
"A family tree put together years ago by MIT graduate and Raytheon inventor Robert Pucel was also a research treasure trove on the Klobuchar/Pucel side of our family." (338)