To Obama
With Love, Joy, Anger, and Hope
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 1, 2018
New York Times Magazine contributing writer Laskas (English/Univ. of Pittsburgh; Concussion, 2015, etc.) reveals the unknown but very important White House office that plays a large part in the legacy of the Obama administration.The Office of Presidential Correspondence was first established under President William McKinley, but the volume has increased considerably, particularly during the previous president's tenure. Early in his career, Obama received vital assistance from "the 101st Senator," Pete Rouse, who had three decades of experience in Washington, D.C. Rouse became Obama's Capitol Hill guru, helping him hit the ground running. Then he stayed on for Obama's time in the White House, modernizing the OPC in the process. "The mail had currency," writes the author. "Some staff members called it 'the letter underground.' Starting in 2010, all mail was scanned and preserved. Starting in 2011, every word of every email factored into the creation of a daily word cloud, its image distributed around the White House so policy makers and staff members alike could get a glimpse at the issues and ideas constituents had on their minds." Rouse insists it was Obama's idea to read 10 letters per day, "the '10LADs' as they came to be known." The organizational process was massive: 50 staff members, more than 30 interns, and some 300 volunteers reading each day's 10,000-plus letters and coding them according to subject. There were form response letters, but some required individual attention from a federal agency. Some received a red dot, meaning they should be processed in 24 hours. Over the years, the process expanded to some of the administration's senior staff and even some members of Congress, who became known as "Friends of the Mailroom." This is a curious collection that readers will find inspiring, depressing, or uplifting depending on their points of view. Regardless, it's impressive that someone read the letters and replies were sent out, some written by Obama. In a comfortable journalistic narrative, Laskas also provides background on many of the letters.A good book for those seeking encouragement that someone in Washington might care.
COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
October 1, 2018
New York Times Magazine contributor Laskas (Concussion) expands her popular article about President Obama’s habit of reading 10 pieces of constituent mail each day into a moving narrative of the writers of memorable letters, the people who review and respond to the mail, and the impact of the daily readings on Obama, who said it “sustained” him. At the emotional center of the book are the letters—some of which are reproduced between chapters—received and sent during Obama’s two terms. They range from heartwarming, such as the one beseeching the president to quit smoking, to gut-wrenching, as when a child writes to ask the president to send a child displaced by the Syrian civil war to live with him. In some, constituents express their dissatisfaction and the president makes his case to them, and the public. (“Your cynicism may be a bit misplaced; I know, and similarly care for, a lot of young people like your friend’s son.”) The cumulative effect of the letters, responses, and the stories behind them is a sucker punch to the heart. This book will leave Obama supporters nostalgic for his tenure in office and readers of all political leanings with a richer sense of America’s citizens and their challenges, dreams, fears, hopes—and handwriting. Agent: Elyse Cheney, Cheney Agency.
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