“For the former presidents, the club can be a vital, sometimes surprising benefit of post-presidential life. They have relinquished power, but not influence; and so their influence becomes a piece of the sitting president’s power. They can do more together than apart, and they all know it; so they join forces as needed, to consult, complain, console, pressure, protect, redeem.”
Dates read: April 25-30, 2016
Books are the best but hardest present to give. Someone liking a book you bought them feels so much deeper than liking a piece of jewelry or a new gadget. It feels like a genuine connection. But books-as-gifts are really hard to get right. What if the recipient doesn’t care for the genre, or doesn’t like the writing? It’s not fail safe, but as a person who likes to buy books as gifts, I try to find a non-fiction book about something the recipient is interested in. Like The President’s Club, which was a gift to my presidential history nerd husband and I borrowed because I thought it looked interesting too!
I think there’s a basic human urge to want to find people who have important things in common with you to hang out with. I know that one of the reasons I blog, besides enjoying the sound of my own voice (so to speak, anyways) is that I enjoy being part of a community of people who really love books and reading. I would never personally want to run for or become the president, but I can only imagine if I were to be, how grateful I would be to have the people around who’d done it before and be able to join with them when I was done to support the new kid. Even if politics isn’t your usual thing, this book is much more about the relationships between people. I really enjoyed it and I think you will too!
Tell me, blog friends…do you have a favorite president?
One year, ago, I was reading: Unbelievable