Reviews for The Room Where It Happened

by John Bolton

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The latest tell-allor, at any rate, tell-someindictment of a dysfunctional presidency.Bolton, a foreign policy hard-liner, writes that Donald Trump first courted him to serve as deputy secretary of state. Nothing doing, Bolton responded: State could not be run successfully from that level. It took back and forth before Bolton finally got to be in charge of something, named national security adviser. Given Trumps contempt for the intelligence community, it stands to reason that Boltons job would be fraught, but he lasted a surprisingly long time17 months, several lifetimes in the Trump administration. Bolton found allies and foes, but mostly the latter: He mistrusted Rex Tillerson and H.R. McMaster from the beginning while he suspects Mike Pompeo of negative leaks at the end of his tenure. But the author directs most of his ire toward Trump, and the book, while thoroughly self-servingwhere was this information during impeachment proceedings?delivers a damning portrait of a man quick to suck up to despots and seek their aid in holding onto his office. Instead of begging for Chinas help in the coming election, as many media outlets portrayed a meeting with Xi Jinping, Bolton writes that Trump stressed the importance of farmers, and increased Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat in the electoral outcome. Such muted statements, he writes, resulted from the governments pre-publication review, which often amounted only to a directive to take out the quotation marks. Readers who supply the missing punctuation will find a Trump who is whiny, self-absorbed, unprepared, and spectacularly ill-informed at every turnhardly breaking news. Notes Bolton in closing, though, its worth considering that a second-term Trump might be an unintended boon: Democrats will find themselves far more pleased substantively with a legacy-seeking Trumpthan conservatives and Republicans, whose political coffins Trump would nail shut. More confirmation of malfeasance than fresh news, but the message is clear: Voter, beware. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The latest tell-all—or, at any rate, tell-some—indictment of a dysfunctional presidency. Bolton, a foreign policy hard-liner, writes that Donald Trump first courted him to serve as deputy secretary of state. Nothing doing, Bolton responded: “State could not be run successfully from that level.” It took back and forth before Bolton finally got to be in charge of something, named national security adviser. Given Trump’s contempt for the intelligence community, it stands to reason that Bolton’s job would be fraught, but he lasted a surprisingly long time—17 months, several lifetimes in the Trump administration. Bolton found allies and foes, but mostly the latter: He mistrusted Rex Tillerson and H.R. McMaster from the beginning while he suspects Mike Pompeo of negative leaks at the end of his tenure. But the author directs most of his ire toward Trump, and the book, while thoroughly self-serving—where was this information during impeachment proceedings?—delivers a damning portrait of a man quick to suck up to despots and seek their aid in holding onto his office. Instead of begging for China’s help in the coming election, as many media outlets portrayed a meeting with Xi Jinping, Bolton writes that Trump “stressed the importance of farmers, and increased Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat in the electoral outcome.” Such muted statements, he writes, resulted from the government’s pre-publication review, which often amounted only to a directive to “take out the quotation marks.” Readers who supply the missing punctuation will find a Trump who is whiny, self-absorbed, unprepared, and spectacularly ill-informed at every turn—hardly breaking news. Notes Bolton in closing, though, it’s worth considering that a second-term Trump might be an unintended boon: “Democrats will find themselves far more pleased substantively with a ‘legacy’-seeking Trump…than conservatives and Republicans,” whose political coffins Trump would nail shut. More confirmation of malfeasance than fresh news, but the message is clear: Voter, beware. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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