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Chasing Hillary: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns, and One Intact Glass Ceiling Hardcover – Illustrated, April 24, 2018

4.2 out of 5 stars 625 ratings

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New York Times bestseller

The Devil Wears Prada meets The Boys on the Bus”—New York Times

The dishy, rollicking, and deeply personal story of what really happened in the 2016 election, as seen through the eyes of the New York Times reporter who gave eight years of her life to covering the First Woman President who wasn't.

For a decade, award-winning New York Times journalist Amy Chozick chronicled Hillary Clinton’s pursuit of the presidency. Chozick’s front-row seat, initially covering Clinton’s imploding 2008 campaign, and then her assignment to “The Hillary Beat” ahead of the 2016 election, took her to 48 states and set off a nearly ten-years-long journey in which the formative years of her twenties and thirties became – both personally and professionally – intrinsically intertwined to Clinton’s presidential ambitions.

Chozick’s candor and clear-eyed perspective—from her seat on the Hillary bus and reporting from inside the campaign’s Brooklyn headquarters, to her run-ins with Donald J. Trump and her globetrotting with Bill Clinton— provide fresh intrigue and insights into the story we thought we all knew. This is the real story of what happened, with the kind of dishy, inside details that repeatedly surprise and enlighten.

But Chasing Hillary is also a rollicking, irreverent, refreshingly honest personal story of how the would-be first woman president looms over Chozick’s life. And, as she gets married, attempts to infiltrate the upper echelons of political journalism and inquires about freezing her eggs so she can have children after the 2016 campaign, Chozick dives deeper into decisions Clinton made at similar points in her life. 

In the process, Chozick came to see Clinton not as an unknowable enigma and political animal but as a complex person, full of contradictions and forged in the political battles and media storms that had long predated Chozick’s years of coverage. 

Trailing Clinton through all of the highs and lows of the most noxious and wildly dramatic presidential election in American history, Chozick comes to understand what drove Clinton, how she accomplished what no woman had before, and why she ultimately failed. Poignant, illuminating, laugh-out-loud funny, Chasing Hillary is a campaign book like never before that reads like a fast-moving political novel.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Chozick’s own funny, wicked and wacky side is on full display, with well-drawn sketches of everyone from fresh-faced campaign interns to the candidates themselves. With her lively voice and eye for detail, Chasing Hillary is an enjoyable read, like The Devil Wears Prada meets The Boys on the Bus.” — New York Times

“[Chasing Hillary is] a sort-of ‘Bridget Jones’s Diary’ meets ‘What it Takes’ coming-of-age rom-com set on the campaign trail, with a tragic twist at the end (spoiler alert: Clinton lost).” — New York Magazine

“Perhaps we should see [the election] now as a funeral for how politics used to be done. Almost nobody, including Chozick, saw it coming. But her book captures the horrors of the journey. It is worth its price in stilettoed prose. Her future as a writer is strawberry-coloured.” — Financial Times

“The book promises to read like a rapidly paced political novel, a memoir converging with one of the most controversial and notable political figures of our time.” — Entertainment Weekly

“[Chasing Hillary] stands to do to Clinton and her campaign what Joshua Green’s Devil’s Bargain did to the president and Steve Bannon—deliver a highly readable and essential chronicle of the election that just was and likely will always be with us.” — American Conservative

“Poignant, insightful…perceptive, pithy and surprising.” — Washington Post

Chasing Hillary [is] so wickedly readable: like Michael Wolff’s Fire and Fury, it’s a nonfiction novel.” — The Guardian

“Amy Chozick’s memoir of covering Hillary Clinton for the New York Times gives you a first-row seat on the past two elections—and an important reality check about how we interpret news from the campaign trail. Come for the politics; stay for the anecdotes about a young journalist juggling ambition, exhaustion and, well, life…. Chozick has my vote for best political memoir of the year.” — Glamour

“[A] funny, raw and female take on the campaign memoir.” — People

“Because in stirring together the two women’s striving in a long, neurotic game of hide and seek, what you arrive at is the lopsided but right-seeming conclusion that if only Hillary Clinton were a little more like Amy Chozick, maybe she’d be president right now.” — Weekly Standard

Almost Famous meets Game Change.” — Axios

“Amy Chozick has written a breathtaking, page-turning masterpiece that pretends to be about Hillary Clinton’s defiant presidential run. But Chasing Hillary is also—for the brilliant Chozick—a deeply personal story.  Wait till you get the gory, insider details of the bloodiest political battle in recent memory.  A must read!” — Mary Karr

“Amy Chozick sweeps us along on a ten-year chase after the most famous and elusive woman in modern politics. At the bittersweet end, she captures Hillary, and America, and the traveling press, and some part of herself.” — David Maraniss

“This insanely readable book manages to bring humor and a fresh inside perspective to the saddest event in history. The details alone are sure to drive Democrats to fisticuffs, or whatever we do when the kale runs out.” — Gary Shteyngart, New York Times bestselling author of Little Failure

From the Back Cover

For nearly a decade, award-winning New York Times journalist Amy Chozick chronicled Hillary Clinton’s pursuit of the presidency. Chozick’s assignments, covering Clinton’s imploding 2008 campaign and then her front-row seat to the 2016 election on “The Hillary Beat,” set off a years-long journey in which the formative years of Chozick’s twenties and thirties became, both personally and professionally, intrinsically intertwined with Clinton’s presidential ambitions. As Clinton tried, and twice failed, to shatter “that highest, hardest glass ceiling,” Chozick was trying, with various fits and starts, to scale the highest echelons of American journalism.

In this rollicking, hilarious narrative, Chozick takes us through the high- (and low-) lights of the most noxious and dramatic presidential election in American history. Chozick’s candor and clear-eyed perspective — from her seat on the Hillary bus and reporting from inside the campaign’s Brooklyn headquarters to her run-ins with Donald J. Trump — provide fresh intrigue and insights into the story we thought we all knew. This is the real story of what happened, with the kind of dishy, inside details that repeatedly surprise and enlighten.

But Chasing Hillary is also the unusually personal and moving memoir of how Chozick came to understand Clinton not as an unknowable enigma and political animal, but as a complete, complex person, full of contradictions and forged in the crucible of political battles that had long predated Chozick’s years covering her. And as Chozick gets engaged, married, buys an apartment, climbs the professional ladder, and inquires about freezing her eggs so she can have children after the 2016 campaign, she dives deeper into decisions Clinton had made at similar points in her early career. In the process, Chozick develops an intimate understanding of what drives Clinton, how she accomplished what no woman had before, and why she ultimately failed.

Chozick also reveals how the social fissures in the electorate that drove angry voters to Trump and blindsided Clinton would unexpectedly bring out the tensions in Chozick’s own life—between the red state she came from and the blue state she ended up in, and her desire to climb in her career as a woman but be treated no differently than a man.

Clinton’s shocking defeat would mark the end of the almost imperial hold she’d had on Chozick for most of her professional life. But the results also make Chozick question everything she’d worked so hard for in the first place. Political journalism had failed. The elite world Chozick had tried for years to fit in with had been rebuffed. The less qualified, bombastic man had triumphed (as they always seem to do), and Clinton had retreated to the woods in Chappaqua, finally comfortable enough to just walk, no makeup, no pants suit, showing the real person Chozick had spent years hoping to see. Illuminating, poignant, laugh-out-loud funny, Chasing Hillary is a campaign book unlike any other that reads like a fast-moving political novel.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Harper; Illustrated edition (April 24, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 400 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0062413597
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0062413598
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.34 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.25 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 out of 5 stars 625 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
625 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book well-written and engaging, describing it as a funny adventure in politics and a gripping look at the campaign. Moreover, they appreciate its honest reporting, insightful content, and heartfelt writing, with one customer noting how it perfectly captures emotions like elation and disbelief. However, the pacing receives mixed reactions, with some finding it fast-paced while others describe it as a slog.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

70 customers mention "Readability"63 positive7 negative

Customers find the book incredibly well written and an excellent story teller.

"...Good read. Get the book." Read more

"...Amy's book is honest, tells a great story and is a must read for people who are into politics no matter which side of the political divide you are on..." Read more

"...But is this a worthy book?..." Read more

"Quick review: This book is funny, informative, gossipy and easy to read. I read it in two nights before bed and didn't want to put it down...." Read more

53 customers mention "Humor"53 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's humor, describing it as a funny adventure in politics with a keen sense of humor.

"...It is a jangle of personal information, politics, and gossip, mainly all relating to politics involving the Clintons, and written often in a..." Read more

"...Amy's book is honest, tells a great story and is a must read for people who are into politics no matter which side of the political divide you are on..." Read more

"...I found the book, funny, self-deprecating, and honest...." Read more

"...This book is a fantastic history lesson; one that the DNC will, hopefully, never fully grasp and that the rest of us will never, ever forget." Read more

51 customers mention "Insight"42 positive9 negative

Customers find the book insightful and fascinating, describing it as intelligent and educational.

"...It is a jangle of personal information, politics, and gossip, mainly all relating to politics involving the Clintons, and written often in a..." Read more

"...I found the book, funny, self-deprecating, and honest...." Read more

"Quick review: This book is funny, informative, gossipy and easy to read. I read it in two nights before bed and didn't want to put it down...." Read more

"...make a buck (sadly, I think the Tur book was exactly that) but an intelligent, interesting, and funny read." Read more

18 customers mention "Honesty"15 positive3 negative

Customers appreciate the book's honesty, describing it as honest reporting.

"...Regarding the bias of reporters. There is no bias. They all supported Hillary. Their support was frank and out in the open...." Read more

"...Amy's book is honest, tells a great story and is a must read for people who are into politics no matter which side of the political divide you are on..." Read more

"...I found the book, funny, self-deprecating, and honest...." Read more

"...I am a huge HRC supporter and fan, and I appreciated the unbiased and objective views of the writer as well as the insightful, sweet anecdotes of my..." Read more

11 customers mention "Look"11 positive0 negative

Customers find the book visually appealing and engaging, with one customer describing it as quite illuminating.

"Searingly honest look inside not just the Hillary Clinton car crash campaign, but also the failure of major media to investigate fully the Russian..." Read more

"...It’s a behind the scenes look at what goes on in a campaign.This is now my second favorite book about the 2016 election...." Read more

"...This book is impossible to put down. It gives you a first hand look at the Hillary the person and the candidate and takes you inside her campaigns..." Read more

"...Also loved the inside look at what it means to be a reporter for The New York Times...." Read more

8 customers mention "Heartfelt writing"8 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the heartfelt writing of the book, with one review noting how it perfectly captures the elation and disbelief of the campaign experience.

"...I think that Amy's book is honest, from her heart, and very funny. Amy comes off as a likable person regardless of the political differences...." Read more

"This is a heartfelt and personal remembrance from someone who gave their all to tell a story...." Read more

"This memoir is funny, personal and gives the reader insight on how Hillary surrounded herself with people who could not give her the information she..." Read more

"...but this book perfectly captured the elation and disbelief I felt watching the inevitable election of the FWP..." Read more

7 customers mention "Pacing"7 positive0 negative

Customers find the pacing of the book interesting, with one customer describing it as fast-paced and timely.

"...It is a jangle of personal information, politics, and gossip, mainly all relating to politics involving the Clintons, and written often in a..." Read more

"Quick review: This book is funny, informative, gossipy and easy to read. I read it in two nights before bed and didn't want to put it down...." Read more

"This was an intersting and fun book to read ...." Read more

"...No matter your feelings on HRC, you’ll read it quickly and enjoy...." Read more

13 customers mention "Value for money"7 positive6 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's value for money, with some finding it worth their time while others describe it as a slog.

"...since college to read "Chasing Hillary" and it was worth the lost sleep...." Read more

"...I rarely stop reading books but this book was a SLOG...." Read more

"...This book was worth my time. Longer Review...." Read more

"Not such a good read. Mostly boring campaign details." Read more

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2018
    Amy Chozick's "Chasing Hillary" is 400 fabulous pages explaining HRC's 2016 campaign and why a caring (for the less fortunate) but cold (in person) candidate and tight-ass aides conspired to screw up Election 2016 and pull defeat from the jaws of victory.

    I pulled one of my few almost-all-nighters since college to read "Chasing Hillary" and it was worth the lost sleep. Academics sniff that journalists are unworthy of capturing other than the "first draft of history" (Philip L. Graham, WaPost). Sometimes journos do it better. You can't understand big city politics unless you read Mike (Chicago Daily News, Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Tribune) Royko's "Boss" (Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, the one who unleashed cops on the 1968 convention demonstrators) and "CH" does the same thing exploring the Clinton side of the 2016 election.

    Some of the anecdotes and insider explanations had a serious theme. Not all:

    * Hillary comes across better in small groups where you get to see her passion for a better world, but she so disliked interaction with journalists that she flew to campaign stops in a separate plane and screwed herself out of chances for casual one-on-ones that might have helped reporters explain her better. That is, Hillary stuck it to herself.

    * The better Chozick's NYT stories got, the more the campaign froze her out. At one presser, she was not called on but Fox News was, twice. At an off the record pizza and beer gathering, she wound up one empty seat away from Clinton and/but an aide immediately grabbed the spot to visually block her.

    * In the roughly 3 years covering HRC leading up to election 2016, she and the candidate had one-on-ones only a handful of times, one "one on one" being when when Hillary walked in on Chozick in an unlocked bathroom door.

    * A young staffer at times followed Chozick everywhere including into the (multi-stall) bathroom during a Clinton Global Initiative forum. Which Chozick wrote about as another example of a control-freak atmosphere and/but later worried that the story would ruin the young woman's chance of having a career in DC after that. See, the author does have a heart.

    * (Post publication) Chelsea Clinton complained the book got it wrong after CC told a magazine (in Chozick's words) Chelsea's "curls just naturally subsided in her early twenties, an affront to frizzy-haired women everywhere," including Chozick. Chelsea must have missed the book's sourcing: "I [Chozick] also happened to know her [Chelsea's] New York hairdresser and [know] a keratin job when I saw it." Bang, Chelsea, gotcha. Chelsea apparently saw herself as being a serious player in a Hillary presidency, much as (sorry, Chelsea, this is a little unfair to you) Ivanka Trump saw herself, and you know how that's turning out. Chelsea probably didn't like the campaign aides' portrayal of her as a bit out of control, a bit full of herself, and probably did not like one aide saying she was "raised by wolves."

    * The campaign disliked Chozick because she (and her editors) too often got to the heart of the matter on, say, how Hillary needed to change her campaign style. (HRC needed to; the campaign just didn't want it public.) That was the story headlined, “Hillary to Show More Humor and Heart, Aides Say.” It led to a joke (and title of one of the chapters), "Spontanaeity Is Embargoed Until 4:00 p.m."

    * Chozick worried in retrospect that the NY Times overplayed the WikiLeaks story knowing know that Russia had a hand in the leaks and that it may have tilted the election toward Trump.

    Chozick also shares some tangential information about being on the campaign, most of all deciding in 2014 when she's in her 30s to put off for 3 years having a baby so she could cover Election 2016. She is self-deprecating ("I'd spent my midtwenties dating an Italian filmmaker who my friends pointed out was more like a homeless man with a camcorder.") She notes the majority of the ~20 main HRC 2016 press pool were women, perhaps because whether they privately supported Hillary or not (most did, but then so did most of the press following Trump), they were obsessed with covering the story of FWP, the possible first woman president.

    Good read. Get the book.
    19 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2018
    This is a good look at how the media covers politics. Disturbing but a must read if you want to get insight into the media.

    Below are some of my impressons.

    Just got done reading the book by Amy Chozik about Chasing Hillary. It is a jangle of personal information, politics, and gossip, mainly all relating to politics involving the Clintons, and written often in a somewhat sardonic or comic voice. Her writing reminds me of Ira Bombeck. I hope some of you have read her.

    I read three book reviews after I read this book. They leave a lot of stuff out and, not surprisingly, are written by people in the same business as Chozik. So, they pass over things which non-coastal elites might find interesting.

    Chozik came from Texas. She always felt she should be in New York City. In H.S. she went to a talk by Hillary and, for the want of a better description, became enamored of her. She was the person that Chozik wanted to be like and to be around. Her feelings for Hillary over the years, never reciprocated or acknowledged, turned into an obsession.

    Worthy of note, her Texas roots always marked her out as sort of an outsider. Our betters (and hers) in the news business would make snarky remarks about Walmart to her.

    Her H.S. class visited NYC for some school function, and when they drove through the hipster neighborhood near NYU (Men holding hands, women wearing very scanty clothing) she knew this was where she had to go to school. She had to be like those people, in her mind. Her parents sent her to U. Texas in Austin. As her sister told her, "They'd be crazy to spend 25,000 per year so you can be a druggie in New York City." She got her nose pierced but it got infected and her parents said take it out or you are not going to Austin.

    After graduation from college with a degree in journalism, she went to NYC without a job and worked as a "rover", a low paid gofer for various new and media organizations. Sexism, white privilege, and elitism were par for the course in this situation. At one point she was so desperate for work she applied to work for an editor (male) who was well known to like young female assistants. (Turned down.) Finally, she got a good job at the Wall Street Journal, via connections she had built up, and after a number of years, moved to the NY Times. She covered social issue and politics. She must have been good at her job. She worked very hard and put her personal life second to her career.

    She was a pool reporter for both of Hillary's campaigns, in 2008 and 2016.

    The life of a campaign reporter on the road might sound like fun, but it is a grind. Away from home, deadlines, forced to write stories about something, anything, living out of a suitcase, and networking, always looking for sources. They might go for a day or two with hardly seeing the candidate. They are often in different vehicles, and might miss the campaign event entirely. And, they report on trivia. They know it, and they compensate by inflating their egos with "scoops" and cultivating an attitude that they are somehow on the inside and helping to create history. Sexism permeates this situation. The women (only one male in the Clinton Press corp), use sex appeal or sex itself to get information. The phalanx of people around Hillary was mostly male. The reporters swoon over the hunky Secret Service guys. Trysts are so common that they invented a phrase (They are good wordsmiths), "Wheels up. Rings off."

    This is a cut throat business. The reporters are not like you and me. They are neurotic and insecure. They are junkies, and reporting the news is their fix.

    Back to Chozik. She is so obsessed with covering Clinton that she puts off having children to cover her campaign. She interrupts her private life to rush away for events (she got married and just leaves her husband any old time work calls.) Anything for a byline story. Getting on the front page is all that any of them care about. Chozik dreams a lot about Hillary. She dreams they are friends and going shopping together, for example, For her part, Hillary knows who she is and hates her for her sometimes honest but less than flattering articles about her. Any article which does not show Hillary in the best possible light makes you her enemy. Over the years, Chozik wrote numerous articles on Hillary, due to her obsession with her, most very positive and in depth, going back many years. They counted for nothing if one article was not 100% positive.

    Anyway, about the 2016 race.

    Regarding the bias of reporters. There is no bias. They all supported Hillary. Their support was frank and out in the open. Not a single reporter mentioned in the book was not a Hillary partisan. Her defeat was a shell shock for all the NY Times people. At Hillary's concession speech, the reporters were careful not to hug one another and cry in public, since that would look bad. Back at the office, Chozik sobbed, and they engaged in self-recrimination for somehow helping Trump to defeat her. What could they have done differently to help elect Hillary? Many concluded they had run too many stories about the e-mail server and such, but they had all assumed Hillary would win and at the time so they were more concerned about scoops and bylines. (In this they were no different from James Comey. Oh, those pollsters!) They blamed the Russians.

    I wish I were making that last paragraph up.

    Regarding Hillary's campaign style: Nothing new to report. She really didn't like meeting people in large groups, which was good, since the turnout at many of her stops was low. Bill was considered a dinosaur, and Hillary went with the fresh faced young men who used analytics, not persona, to win elections. Chozik herself was shocked and dismayed when Bill took issue with some BLM hecklers, pointing out he sent a black gang leader to jail who would hook 13 yo boys on coke and get them to murder people for more drugs. That was to me one of the finest moments of the Cllinton campaign, but they put Bill on a very short leash after that.

    Hillary almost never met or talked with the press pool. Chozik got a personal call from Trump about one of her stories, and she thanked him for the call. She told him that Hillary never called the reporters herself and hardly ever held news conferences. Chozik was very upset when Trump used that against Hillary. Chozik was mortified she might have helped Trump and hurt Hillary.

    There is a lot of good detail, minutia, even, in this book.

    As a person who was going to work for "Everyday Americans" and was a dedicated public servant all of her life, Hillary has done well. Her entourage on election night stayed in a hotel suite quite a bit away from the Javits Center, but near Trump Tower, costing $24,000 per night. She was with a small group of family and inner circle. When she lost that night, nobody wanted to tell her. They finally made her young campaign manager do it.

    Huma was her closest adviser. Big time donors asked her to step aside after the shi* hit the fan over her husband. She refused and Hillary wouldn't make her go.

    She did great talking to latino workers in the bowels of the casinos in Las Vegas. They were her strongest supporters. She won the crucial Nevada caucus because Harry Reid made a telephone call to a union chief who called the casino operators and told them to give paid time off to their staff to attend (and thus be counted) in the caucuses. Didn't matter one bit if they were citizens or could speak English. Chozik described how in one caucus in Las Vegas the Latinos greatly outnumbered the few old white men who were Bernie Sanders supporters.

    Speaking of Bernie, she hated his supporters. When NYU students had a big demonstration in favor of Bernie right before the NY State primary, she went among the students and interviewed them. They all supported Bernie. At that moment she hated NYU and the student body. They were so privileged and they wouldn't support Hillary! Her father had been right all along about going to U. Texas! Note: I didn't make this up. It is in her book.

    She called the Bernie Bros "harmless white guys .... who couldn't get laid."

    The "basket of deplorables" remark was not off the cuff. She used that many times in her small fund raising sessions with big donors, and it always got a positive response. She let it slip out in public because she was groggy from her pneumonia and her medication. Nobody had had the nerve to tell her she shouldn't talk like that in public or private.

    It was realized by the campaign staff that Hillary and Bill were acting like it was the 1990's in their behavior: Stonewalling.

    This was reflected in their actions regarding the Clinton Foundation, the e-mail server, and Hillary's pneumonia. In the 1990's, Bill and Hillary would routinely stonewall any issue that might be an embarrassment, and got away with all of it except the impeachment part. They did the same thing in 2016. Hillary stalled and stalled on coming clean on the e-mail server, and thus the issue dragged out until a few days before the election. Chozik blamed the media, but the blame lay squarely with Clinton.

    Hillary's fainting spell was all on Hillary. She only told one or two of her inner circle she had pneumonia (Huma among them), and when she collapsed nobody knew what was going on. If you recall, they held her upright after she fainted, which is a good way to get brain damage.

    One story that raised the ire of the Clinton campaign covered how Hillary spent her summer in the Hamptons after the nomination mooching off wealthy donors for accommodations and holding small but very lucrative fundraisers. The press pool was not allowed to attend. They just sat outside beyond the range of hearing. So, while Harvey Weinstein and Meryl Streep (still a supporter of Roman Polanski) and others attended these gatherings by paying many thousands of dollars, the press just sat outside in the bus. They charged 10,000 for a family photo with Hillary, I believe. Chozik calculated that summer she cleared about 150,000 per hour. That story did not endear her to the Clintons.

    Chozik confirms the rumor. For about 10 months during the Republican primary, the Clinton campaign urged the media to build up three Republican nominees, including Trump, Cruz, and Carson, because they felt they would be the easiest to beat in the general election. This is called the Pied Piper strategy. If this is not illegal, it should be. It worked.

    Trump said that when he was playing golf with Bill Clinton in 2015 he suggested Trump should run for President.

    So, by this account, Hillary not only helped Trump get the Republican nomination, but then went on to lose to him in a race she ought to have won by every conventional measure.

    Reflect.

    My opionino: Nobody caused Hillary to lose the election. She lost it fair and square. And, she and her supporters never seemed to realize that this election is about the country, not Hillary Clinton.

    The trivia meter was buried in this book. Chozik talks a lot about her frizzly hair. Harry Reid told her that in Nevada, with its dry climate, her hair would become straight. It did, and boy was she pleased and wrote a lot about it. Also, lots of stuff about hunky and handsome guys on the campaign trail, and whether this or that person is attractive or not and what kind of clothes they wear. And, battles keeping her weight down and going to spin classes.

    In breaking news, Chelsea Clinton criticized the author for suggesting in this book she waxed her hair. And, so on.

    Read the book and don't depend on this or any review anywhere else to tell you what is in the book.

    I recommend Shattered as a much better book if you want to know about the 2016 election from the Democrat point of view. Thus far I have read five books at least (Shattered, What Happened, Hacks , Chasing Hilary, and A Higher Loyalty) about this election. All of them were educational. And, instead of raising your blood pressure, they tend to lower it. Knowledge does that.

    American politics are hopeless. Just all about image. And, finally, they are dissolving into conspiracy theories.
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  • Santo Trafficante
    4.0 out of 5 stars Just can't put it down
    Reviewed in France on April 27, 2018
    So, what is so great about this book (I have the cheaper Kindle version)? For starters, I'm only in the first half of it, but I like it so much I have to share my impression right away, as there is no review on amazon.fr yet. Amy Chozick's trick is that she's underestimated by the political circus she writes about. She often comes across as sort of a little hippy girl who's completely out of place, but then she hits where it seems to hurt. I mean, there must be a reason she's working as a political reporter for the New York Times.

    It's true that the book is a lot about her, better still, it's about her life on the campaign trail. There is some stuff we europeans can't get, you must probably live in the states for that, but luckily she does not start with Adam and Eve, she does not care to explain to us european readers the acronyms she sometimes uses, for exemple. Seeing the HRC campaign through her eyes makes for a passionate reading, and, as I already states, I simply can't put this book down. As a person who reads always several books at a time, this is the highest compliment.

    Start by downloading the Kindle sample and see for yourself.
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  • Paul Gleitman
    5.0 out of 5 stars Complete, interesting , honest , well paced ,thoroughly researched
    Reviewed in Canada on July 31, 2018
    Excellent book.
  • Walter
    5.0 out of 5 stars Alternate Political Universe
    Reviewed in Germany on May 14, 2018
    This is not really a book about Hillary Clinton's campaign to become president, but more the personal record of the life of one reporter on this campaign trail. However, reading this book one gets an idea why Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton to become president: he was not living in a bubble.

    He had no plan, but self-confidence enough to ignore all experts; with her it was just the opposite. And the author in the end feels guilty for reporting it; she wanted Hillary to be FTW – first woman president. It did not happen.

    In a way this here tale from an alternate universe of media people and their political vis-à-vis comes almost as a shock. Reading this book one realizes that the people behind all those grand words in print or on screen are… well, shallow.

    The candidate, her handlers, the journalists attached to her: they all are like passengers of a lifeboat adrift on the ocean. Real life is under the surface - but they do not care to get wet. Whereas the Donald enjoyed splashing everyone….

    The book is quite easy to read, almost a page-turner if only for dedicated Clinton-followers/haters and campaign-aficionados. But do not expect too many new insights.
  • Holden m groin
    5.0 out of 5 stars A fantastic read
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 15, 2018
    What a fine book! an amazing insight into the modern American political process, the interplay of wealth and power and a clear concise description of how Hilary Clinton blew it and why there may never be a woman president .
    All this written in a funny engaging style which makes the book hard to put down, read it in two days and am reading it again. Well done Amy!
  • Carole
    2.0 out of 5 stars Boring
    Reviewed in Canada on September 3, 2018
    no exciting chapters..no wow factors