I have been trying to balance my political reading a little more, trying to understand the conservative perspective more without reading things that I thought may make me want to beat my head against a walk, so when I saw this at the library, I grabbed it, thinking it should be benign enough to fit the bill, and benign it definitely was. While I did enjoy reading about their impressions of their former Presidents/ dad and grandfather as humans versus politiicans (and to be fair, the book truly does humanize them, which is what I was looking for), the rest of the book was painfully boring. Written in alternating chapters by the twins, what became painfully clear as the book dragged on, is that they're both just really privileged, sheltered, normal young women. And oddly, they don't seem to have much, if any, interest in politics- though I suppose thqt makes sense, as their lives have been so blessed and fortunate,that they will never be much affected by policy, beyond it affecting their inheritance one day. So, through most of this one I was bored. Reading about how Jenna planned her wedding and Barbara studied abroad simply wasn't very interesting- actually, beyond having a Secret Service detail and recognizable names, their lives were actually very mundane. The book dragged, but the pictures were cool. The one particularly bizarre section of the book was Barbara describing a long dinner conversation with Vladimir Putin, whom she aeems to characterize as a nice, yet misunderstood man, versus a foreign adversary and dictator. I suppose I found it interesting that the Bush family also had a decent relationship with Putin- I didn't realize that previous Republican Presidents also didn't see him aa a threat (very strange, considering our history with Russia). Just 2 stars.