Jeffrey Keeten
asked
Barack Obama:
In the prologue of his book The World as It Is, which is also a chapter in your book, (Did Rhodes poach that title from you? :-) ), Ben Rhodes shares this scene where you both muse about the implications of the successful election of Donald Trump. ”’I don’t know,’ [you] said. ‘Sometimes I wonder whether I was ten or twenty years too early.’” Do you still believe that to be true?
Barack Obama
Your first question is easy: Ben did poach that title from me. As for your second, I do still believe that. It’s not that I considered waiting longer to run, but rather that this young generation coming up is more engaged, more open to diversity and inclusiveness, and more passionate about solving problems like climate change and gun violence and remaking an unequal economy that gives everybody an equal shot than some older generations. I did say in 2008 that I was running because I didn’t want to see America kick the can down the road another four years, or eight years, on those issues, so having them fully in the fight would have made my presidency easier, that’s for sure. Some of my staff, however, argue that I was right on time – that even if it was uncomfortable, my presidency accelerated a long overdue grappling with issues that we’ve left buried too long, that even if it was disruptive, it accelerated some of the changes we need. It’s not lost on me that some of them are the oldest millennials now, a transition to that younger generation coming up.
More Answered Questions
Daryl Muranaka
asked
Barack Obama:
As a president who has spent a lot of time working on your writing craft, I wanted to ask about your process. Did you set aside a daily time to write or do it in clumps? Given your busy scheduled, I'm wondering how you fit in the time to not just write but also THINK about the actual words and structures you were going to use. How long would you take on your first sentences for the chapters and for the memoir itself?
Susanne
asked
Barack Obama:
How did President Obama prepare to write such a "mammoth" memoir, and how is he able to recall key details and quotes with such accuracy? He referenced checking with former members of his staff, (like Axe and Plouffe) however, I'm wondering if he kept notes (on yellow pads), or audio files from the past, which enabled him to write his extremely eloquent and informative memoir?
Barack Obama
21,464 followers
About Goodreads Q&A
Ask and answer questions about books!
You can pose questions to the Goodreads community with Reader Q&A, or ask your favorite author a question with Ask the Author.
See Featured Authors Answering Questions
Learn more