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The World as It Is: A Memoir of the Obama White House Hardcover – June 5, 2018
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“The closest view of Obama we’re likely to get until he publishes his own memoir.”—George Packer, The New Yorker
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE GUARDIAN
For nearly ten years, Ben Rhodes saw almost everything that happened at the center of the Obama administration—first as a speechwriter, then as deputy national security advisor, and finally as a multipurpose aide and close collaborator. He started every morning in the Oval Office with the President’s Daily Briefing, traveled the world with Obama, and was at the center of some of the most consequential and controversial moments of the presidency. Now he tells the full story of his partnership—and, ultimately, friendship—with a man who also happened to be a historic president of the United States.
Rhodes was not your typical presidential confidant, and this is not your typical White House memoir. Rendered in vivid, novelistic detail by someone who was a writer before he was a staffer, this is a rare look inside the most poignant, tense, and consequential moments of the Obama presidency—waiting out the bin Laden raid in the Situation Room, responding to the Arab Spring, reaching a nuclear agreement with Iran, leading secret negotiations with the Cuban government to normalize relations, and confronting the resurgence of nationalism and nativism that culminated in the election of Donald Trump.
In The World as It Is, Rhodes shows what it was like to be there—from the early days of the Obama campaign to the final hours of the presidency. It is a story populated by such characters as Susan Rice, Samantha Power, Hillary Clinton, Bob Gates, and—above all—Barack Obama, who comes to life on the page in moments of great urgency and disarming intimacy. This is the most vivid portrayal yet of Obama’s worldview and presidency, a chronicle of a political education by a writer of enormous talent, and an essential record of the forces that shaped the last decade.
Praise for The World as It Is
“A book that reflects the president [Rhodes] served—intelligent, amiable, compelling and principled . . . a classic coming-of-age story, about the journey from idealism to realism, told with candor and immediacy . . . His achievement is rare for a political memoir: He has written a humane and honorable book.”—Joe Klein, The New York Times Book Review
- Print length480 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateJune 5, 2018
- Dimensions9.5 x 6.4 x 1 inches
- ISBN-100525509356
- ISBN-13978-0525509356
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book insightful and thoughtful, providing a personal look at the Obama presidency. They describe it as an enjoyable, compelling read with an engaging narrative. The writing quality is described as well-crafted and articulate. Readers appreciate the captivating, exciting, and refreshing pacing. The author's honesty and forthright storytelling are appreciated. The memoir provides a wonderful portrait of the Obama White House in a relatable style.
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Customers find the book insightful and honest. They appreciate the President's humanity and compassion. The memoir provides a personal perspective on his time in office. It adds context and explains choices. Readers describe the author as cool and objective, providing a fantastic opportunity to see the world through their eyes and glimpse into the inner workings of the White House.
"...It is an intimate look at the inner workings of the Obama administration as they determinedly use every day of their last year in the White House..." Read more
"...underlining of how the country was once led by careful, well-informed professionals with the long-term always in sight versus the impulsive,..." Read more
"...I really got a sense from this book of an extremely competent, thoughtful and prepared Administration, so different from the chaos we're currently..." Read more
"...The choice suits the subject matter, in a way Hemingway imitators rarely manage...." Read more
Customers find the memoir engaging and enjoyable to read. They appreciate the author's honest account of the Obama White House. The book is written in a good storytelling style that keeps readers hooked.
"...Getting to know more about Rhodes, too, was enjoyable and interesting...." Read more
"...A fine book. Easy to read, with infinite possibilities for onward discussion and debate." Read more
"...I really got a sense from this book of an extremely competent, thoughtful and prepared Administration, so different from the chaos we're currently..." Read more
"...-- The World as It Is winds its way through euphoria, exhaustion, disappointment, renewed faith, and finally an impending sense of dread and..." Read more
Customers find the book well-written and easy to read. They appreciate the author's keen eye and ability to provide an inside look at the Obama presidency. The writing style is articulate, thoughtful, and pleasant, despite being one-sidedly partisan. Readers also mention that the book is a light read given the subject matter.
"...The book is highly readable with a text that seems authentic and short on self-serving excuses...." Read more
"This was a well written account of the author's years working on foreign policy for the Obama campaign and for the entire eight years of the Obama..." Read more
"...Rhodes is an engaging writer, and he writes in a scrupulously spare, Hemingway-esque style (a writer he references on numerous occasions)...." Read more
"...Ben Rhodes is a very good writer who permits us to participate with him as he grows from a campaign worker into a member of small circle of people..." Read more
Customers find the book's pacing engaging. They describe it as captivating, exciting, and refreshing. The memoir provides an unexpected look behind the scenes of a real president. Readers find it uplifting, warm, and entertaining. They also mention that the experience is transformational and clear.
"...one staffer who saw and did it all -- The World as It Is winds its way through euphoria, exhaustion, disappointment, renewed faith, and finally an..." Read more
"...I’d recommend this book: fast, interesting, and well-written...." Read more
"...this insanity of chaos and disruption, this book feels like a comforting look back to a time when idealists were working to bring about change in..." Read more
"...And it is a wonderfully patriotic and uplifting book, even with the sadness, because, as the author points out: “Our constant struggle to improve..." Read more
Customers appreciate the author's honesty and forthright narrative. They find the book a well-written, honest memoir of the Obama presidency. The author is described as a dedicated truthteller who is passionate about his country.
"...Rhodes himself comes across as an intense, dedicated truth-teller, full of good intentions and self-questioning...." Read more
"...and even more important he demonstrates the combination of nobility and pride..." Read more
"...You gave us a great civics lesson, I can't doubt that; and you certainly did quite a terrific job communicating with those of leadership in foreign..." Read more
"I would like to thank the author for this compelling, honest book. These are the days that we lived...." Read more
Customers find the book provides a personal and detailed look into the Obama presidency. They appreciate the relatable style, thoughtful writing, and attention to detail. Readers describe it as an honest and clear picture of the inside workings of the White House.
"...Ben Rhodes writes in a relatable style with which anyone who has a passion for their work will identify...." Read more
"...is an engaging writer, and he writes in a scrupulously spare, Hemingway-esque style (a writer he references on numerous occasions)...." Read more
"...However, it is a thoughtful, wistful and intelligent look at what we can do with a good person at the helm." Read more
"Ben Rhodes style conveys authenticity, which leads me to understand a great deal more about the Obama years...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's portrayal of President Obama's character. They find it a fascinating look into his personality, demonstrating compassion, vulnerability, and integrity. The book provides a very real version of the president and is praised for being humane and objective.
"...of his staff like Ben Rhodes who admires the man for his integrity, compassion, and pragmatism...." Read more
"...Iran nuclear deal, the move toward democracy in Burma, portraits of numerous foreign leaders, and all kinds of details about working in the white..." Read more
"...I appreciated the very real version of Obama that Ben put forth; also, I liked that the book wasn’t about him but rather inspired by him...." Read more
"...While Obama had his obvious flaws in policy, he was an extraordinarily compassionate person, as displayed in this book...." Read more
Customers have differing opinions about the author's work. Some find it excellent and well-written, showing a competent and thoughtful author. Others feel the book lacks substance, is boring, and shows his incompetence.
"...The lack of substance may coincide with what the Obama years accomplished...." Read more
"...I really got a sense from this book of an extremely competent, thoughtful and prepared Administration, so different from the chaos we're currently..." Read more
"...But my hopes were dashed. The book is boring. Rhodes is so busy being a good guy that his ability to share what he learned is blunted." Read more
"...concerning counter terrorism, the Syrian debacle, te abject failure of his Yemen Model and the inability to comprehend ISiS and Iraq quagmire...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2018In April 2018, Magnolia films released a documentary entitled The Final Year. It is an intimate look at the inner workings of the Obama administration as they determinedly use every day of their last year in the White House to see some of their key initiatives realized. The film focuses on Secretary of State John Kerry, U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power, National Security Adviser Susan Rice, President Obama, and an individual who had—until my viewing of the documentary—not caught my attention. He was Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes: a man who transitioned a degree in creative writing into a position as the political speechwriter for Barak Obama and became a close confidant of the president himself.
Upon researching more about Ben Rhodes, I discovered that the release of the documentary closely coincided with the upcoming release of Rhodes’ memoir The World as It Is in June 2018. I wanted to know more about this man whose career took the path I dreamed for my own in my early years as an undergraduate student. I preordered the book and waited impatiently for its arrival.
As I am currently living in Liberia, West Africa, mail takes a couple of weeks more than the normal wait period. So, when I finally received my copy of the book, I couldn’t wait to get started. Rhodes drew me in with an epigraph from Hemingway’s Old Man in the Sea—a story that deals in many of these same themes that we witness and experience in politics by an author who bemoaned the publicity and lack of privacy that the success of the novella brought to his own existence. Then, Rhodes hooked me with an anecdote in his prologue that illustrated Obama’s humor and human side in his casual interactions with his staff, and I looked forward to seeing more of that side of what happened in the Obama White House.
The timing of events around this book continued to be serendipitous. As I approached the halfway point of the 422 pages, Obama was scheduled to give the 16th Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture. At this point in the book, Rhodes writes about how Obama spoke to the president of Egypt about lessons he learned over the years from Nelson Mandela (who was then very ill and in the hospital) about the importance of small gestures showing proof that a leader is dedicated to bringing the country together and that everyone is important to that effort (204). I had just finished reading this as I listened to Obama give his lecture in celebration of Mandela’s 100th birthday, and I both cheered at the message he spoke and mourned the absence of this man of integrity in the political arena.
At least I had Ben Rhodes’s stories to fill the void.
As I continued to read, Obama’s voice resonated in my head in those moments of dialogue or speech-making. And Rhodes writes about meetings, special events, social gatherings, and private conversations in a way that makes readers feel like they were at least sitting in a chair against the wall in the same room as the moments transpired. We are made part of those situations by being allowed to witness them in their drama.
Getting to know more about Rhodes, too, was enjoyable and interesting. I have come to admire him, too, for the reasons he made his career choices, for showing his humanity in the ways he struggled to balance his professional and personal lives, and for the dedication he showed to Obama and his vision. Early in the book, Rhodes writes, “The events of my twenties felt historic, but the people involved did not. I wanted a hero--someone who could make sense of what was happening around me and in some way redeem it” (7). As someone who is close in age to Rhodes and could empathize with his reactions to events that fed this need (like the 9/11 attacks and the war with Iraq), I identified with this statement.
"It was always hard to explain what it was that I admired about this complicated man. Watching him, I felt that I would never have to explain it to anyone again."
Throughout the book, there are numerous instances where Rhodes’s respect for Obama’s style of leadership, thought process, and decision making is evident. In one particularly moving section of Chapter 25, he begins by stating “A ten-day stretch in June encapsulated both the events that ensured Obama’s presidency would be a historic success and the clouds that would hover over his legacy” (316). Then, over the course of the following pages, he discusses the success of the Supreme Court Rulings on the Affordable Care Act and same-sex marriage. These victories, however, had a shadow cast over them by a mass shooting in a black church in Charleston, South Carolina. Rhodes’s play-by-play description of Obama’s subsequent memorial speech at that church, followed by the President’s singing of “Amazing Grace,” and his calling out of each of the victims’ names is perhaps the most emotional moment of the book; and Rhodes himself describes being moved to tears for the first time in many years as he watched the events unfold on the White House television channel that played whenever the president was speaking. He writes “It was always hard to explain what it was that I admired about this complicated man. Watching him, I felt that I would never have to explain it to anyone again” (319). As the chapter came to a close, I was also in tears and felt overwhelmed by the compassion and humanity of the most powerful man in the world.
Ben Rhodes writes in a relatable style with which anyone who has a passion for their work will identify. There are lines in his prose that bespeak his training in creative writing, but there is also a vast knowledge of someone who was immersed in moments that had domestic and international importance. In his recollections and retelling of those situations, he has distilled the Obama doctrine—“Don't do stupid shit.” (278)—and has reminded us of Obama’s world view that made us all believe that “America’s leadership depended on our military but was rooted not just in our strength but also in our goodness” (25).
Finally, many readers will connect with the fact that Rhodes was a fan of Anthony Bourdain and pushed for the famous meal in Hanoi, Vietnam shared between the celebrity chef and Obama in 2016. Had I been reading this at any other time before June 2018, I simply would have been excited to see Bourdain’s name mentioned here and there throughout the narrative. Unfortunately, Bourdain’s suicide happened just weeks before I happened upon Rhodes’s first mention of him in the memoir. So, fond recognition was diluted by a sense of loss on those pages.
Of all the possible celebrities to mention, however, Anthony Bourdain is one of the most fitting, for the philosophy that drove him in his travels—that “If people would just sit down and eat together, and understand something about each other, maybe they could figure things out” (737)—was not that different from President Obama’s mentality.
And, indeed, the optimism that Obama so frequently talked about throughout the years is something that transferred to members of his staff like Ben Rhodes who admires the man for his integrity, compassion, and pragmatism. No, Rhodes doesn’t agree with every decision the president made. Yes, there are times when Rhodes disappoints the president and feels like a failure. He is human and has his ups and downs. The administration in the Obama White House also had its zig-zags. But it seems that each of the staff members—Rhodes especially—came away from the experiences of those eight years with an even stronger belief in the possibilities of what could be when there is leadership that is rooted in strength but also goodness.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2018I finished this thoughtful, highly personal journal of the Obama presidency on the same day as the Trump debacle in Helsinki. What a poignant underlining of how the country was once led by careful, well-informed professionals with the long-term always in sight versus the impulsive, transactional mode that now inflicts daily stomach-churning to an emotionally worn out public. The world was not a quiet or un-dangerous place in the Obama years, but somehow the we mostly felt protected by intelligent leadership and a strong network of international partnerships.
Ben Rhodes' account of his eight years working as one of Obama's principal speech writers and senior advisors on foreign affairs moves more or less chronologically through the presidential term from landmark event to landmark event. Most of the events are detailed and explained with speeches and remarks prepared for delivery by Obama. Between events, author Rhodes invests the story with a great deal of his own hopes, doubts and self-accused failures as an aide with responsibility for providing informed counsel to the president; a husband in providing support and companionship to a new spouse; and as a person of humane principles who had to compromise too often in the face of political realities. His was not an easy job and amounted to a 24/7 preoccupation for more than eight years.
The book is highly readable with a text that seems authentic and short on self-serving excuses. In fact, Rhodes cites many instances when Obama chided him for lingering too long on political setbacks and miscalculations. Obama's ability to put things in perspective comes across clearly in account after account.
What this book does not do is attempt to present a comprehensive look at everything that the administration undertook to accomplish during its eight years in power. This is about the foreign affairs agenda, pure and simple. The reader will have to wait for future books for inside information about the healthcare battle, civil rights, domestic political relationships, the mechanics of the two Obama campaigns, personal details about the Obama family, and myriad other key elements of the presidency.
Rhodes himself comes across as an intense, dedicated truth-teller, full of good intentions and self-questioning. And who wouldn't be when working for and with a boss who displayed the same qualities squared?
A fine book. Easy to read, with infinite possibilities for onward discussion and debate.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 12, 2018This was a well written account of the author's years working on foreign policy for the Obama campaign and for the entire eight years of the Obama presidency. The sections on Cuba were especially interesting, because you really got to see how things work behind the scenes, with secret trips to Canada to negotiate, assistance from the Vatican, and lots of other fascinating details. Other interesting parts include getting a glimpse of the personal cost of being the constant target of the dishonest and cynical attacks of Fox News and their ilk, also the amount of effort and preparation that went into the Iran nuclear deal, the move toward democracy in Burma, portraits of numerous foreign leaders, and all kinds of details about working in the white house.
I really got a sense from this book of an extremely competent, thoughtful and prepared Administration, so different from the chaos we're currently enduring.
Top reviews from other countries
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Spain on June 16, 20242.0 out of 5 stars Repetitivo, llega a cansar
Sorprende es saber que la politica exterior de Estados Unidos pueda quedar en manos de gente sin experiencia que llega. a la Casa Blanca y alcanzan puesto de gran responsabilidad. Algunos como Rhodes, eran simple redactores de discursos y en semanas tienen acceso a lo más importante d ela politica americana.
El libro, es excesivamente prolijo, y tras o cuatro capítulo, es repetitivo. " el autor está en su casa, le llaman por la noche o le suena la blackberry. Algo ha pasado en el mundo y hay que prepararle una respuesta. a Obama. Esta se realiza y las cosas se enderezan." Asi , una y otra vez. Demasiado.
Jason DupuisReviewed in Canada on April 14, 20215.0 out of 5 stars Great read!
A thorough accounting of the Obama foreign policy shop. Honest and intense in its discussions of the most important global events of the Obama White House. Great read.
Chaithanya CReviewed in India on August 4, 20204.0 out of 5 stars Know the US president work from behind the scenes.
If u want to know how the POTUS(President of the United States) works from The White House then read this book.
Allen Van HalleReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 11, 20205.0 out of 5 stars This is an enthralling read which I found unable to put down like many books that I have read from good authors. Except that this is not a story or a novel, it is a factual account of someone working proximityin close proximity most of the time with the, at the time, the most powerful leader of the "free" world who happened to be "black". One wonders why politicians become politicians with the tress of the decisions they have to make, the hours they have to work and the dirt and insults they have to pick up and deal with. I salute you, and your boss, for tthathe good that you did and for this historical and unique diary of right years of your and many other lives that you touched on the way.
This is an enthralling read which I found unable to put down at times like many books that I have read from good authors. Except that things not a story or a novel, it is a factual 'inside' account of someone working in close proximity most of the time with the then most powerful leader of the "free" world who happened to be "black" . One wonders why politicians become politicians with the stress of the decisions they have to make, the hours they have to work and the dirt and the insults they have to pick up and deal with. I salute you, and your boss, for the good that you did and for this historical and unique diary of eight years of your life and the many other lives that you touched on the way.
MauroReviewed in Mexico on September 7, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Buen texto
Excelente



