In
May, The
New York Times published
two poison-pen reviews of Ivanka Trump's book Women
Who Work. Jessa
Crispin (Twitter handle @theBookSlut) ranted it sounded like “the
scrambled Tumblr feed of a demented 12-year-old.”
So it's not
surprising that the Times would
slam her mother Ivana's new book Raising
Trump, complete
with her ex-husband described as a "throbbing blister."
Does
anyone wonder why the Trumps might think the Times has
an animus against them?
The
Sunday Times
Book Review carried
this attack on the front cover, by liberal Vanity
Fair scribbler James
Wolcott. Ivana's
book was reviewed alongside Jerry Oppenheimer's new biography of the
Kardashians.
Wolcott notes that Ivana Trump boasts that her children
Donald Jr., Eric, and Ivanka are all "faithful spouses, superb
parents, accomplished business people and sterling assets during
their father's presidential campaign."
Wolcott finds that barely
worth contemplating: he thought the title Raising
Trump was
all about "husband-wrangling."
I fear Ivana has mistimed her memoir and misread the mood of the troubled country, which isn’t interested in heartwarming holiday tales, family recipes, cute anecdotes about her trying to order a glass of Chablis at a Taco Bell, tips on teaching kids manners and the grown-up kids’ rote testimonials reiterating throughout the text what a swell mom she was and is (Ivanka’s initial entry has all the warmth and personality of a ribbon-cutting ceremony).
I fear Ivana has mistimed her memoir and misread the mood of the troubled country, which isn’t interested in heartwarming holiday tales, family recipes, cute anecdotes about her trying to order a glass of Chablis at a Taco Bell, tips on teaching kids manners and the grown-up kids’ rote testimonials reiterating throughout the text what a swell mom she was and is (Ivanka’s initial entry has all the warmth and personality of a ribbon-cutting ceremony).
We’re
past the point of indulging hokum with a high thread count.Uppermost
on the reader’s inquiring mind is how Ivana’s intimate
perspective might help us unlock how the slick wheeler-dealer who
charmed and courted her when she arrived in Manhattan in the 1970s —
“an all-American good guy,” her instincts told her — mutated
over the decades into apresident
so seething with ignorance, malice, prejudice and destruction. Some
hints, that is, of how we got into our present predicament of being
held hostage by a throbbing blister.
Get A Copy of This Book Today, Click Now:
Original review on: www.newsbusters.org
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