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What It Takes
Richard Cramer
Took a while to get into, but once I did it was hard 
to stop. Loved Cramer's personal tone throughout the 
novel, thought it did a good job bringing the reader 
closer to these larger than life figures and 
demythologizing them and their lives. Broad takeaways 
from the book: news reporters should be held under 
more scrutiny (especially when it comes to measuring 
intangibles like 'Karacter'), politics & governing 
competence rarely go hand in hand, and the memory of 
the public is intensely fleeting. At first it was a 
bit disorienting flipping between the life stories and 
political fortunes of 5 distinct people, but it 
eventually felt natural which is quite a feat. The 
omission of Jesse Jackson felt pretty glaring, but I 
can understand Cramer's reasoning. In terms of each 
candidate: Dukakis was fun to read about. I think he's 
the most poetic candidate described and I'm kind of a 
big fan of his. I still don't really know what 
happened in the general election, but I would like to 
learn more. Hart was also a pretty sad story, the 
description of the media attacks on him was fairly 
aggravating. The fact that his 'karacter' became more 
important than his actual ideas felt sad. Biden was 
the reason I heard about this book, and it was 
interesting to see him enter a race as the young 
front-runner to contrast with how I think of him 
today. The portrait painted of him was more humanizing 
than I've known; and once again, his treatment by the 
media left a bad taste in the mouth (and by Maureen 
Dowd!). Gephardt felt like the Democratic version of 
Bush, but perhaps more sympathetic. Dole was an 
interesting figure, and one of the more opaque ones to 
understand. He passed away while I was reading this 
book, and the book's description of him felt like a 
fitting eulogy to him. His life story was the most 
touching, and the amount he acheived is truly 
remarkable. The way his campaign fell apart was 
particularly heartbreaking. Bush was the least 
sympathetic character throughout the book. The fact 
that someone who lived in such a bubble throughout his 
entire life could exercise such power over so many 
people is frightening. His ending reminded me of the 
ending to Veep, but I'm not sure his Faustian bargain 
came fully due for him.