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The New York Times Book Review
…any Clinton book is by definition a wild, perplexing tale, and Bill and Hillary is worth reading as a reminder that the title characters…did many things that today seem almost too outlandish to be true. Chafe largely synthesizes prior books by Joe Klein, Gail Sheehy, David Maraniss and Carl Bernstein, but the episodes he recounts still have the power to startle…—Jodi Kantor
Overview
In Bill and Hillary: The Politics of the Personal, the distinguished historian William H. Chafe boldly argues that the trajectory of the Clintons’ political lives can be understood only through the prism of their personal relationship. Each experienced a difficult childhood. Bill had an abusive stepfather, and his mother was in denial about the family’s pathology. He believed that his success as a public servant would redeem the family. Hillary grew up with an autocratic father and a self-sacrificing mother whose...