From the VG Bookshelf: Electable

From the VG Bookshelf: Electable

From the VG Bookshelf: Electable

You knew it had to happen. It was inevitable. Especially after Hillary Clinton’s failed 2016 campaign and then both Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren failing to win the Oval Office in 2020. With those losses, someone was bound to write a book about why there hasn’t been a female POTUS. Electable: Why American Hasn’t Put a Woman in the White House. . . Yet purports to be just such a book.Political reporter Ali Vitali penned the book, released just over two months ago. Published by Dey Street Books, an imprint of HarperCollins, my first indication the book might not be as groundbreaking as it could be was the number of reviews it’s managed to get on Amazon. Or perhaps I should say the lack of reviews and ratings. Seven reviews and 58 ratings. That isn’t good, especially not for a traditionally published book where you’d expect the publisher to do at least a little push both before and upon release.

My next red flag came when I checked to see where the book ranked and in which categories. Mind you, this is supposed to be about the last election and why America hasn’t elected a female president. So why is it categorized, among other things, in “biographies of journalists”?

With those red flags and others already flying, I opened the book and started reading. . . or at least trying to.

From the opening words of the book, I knew I was in trouble. Only paragraphs into the first chapter, Vitali stated that Elizabeth Warren could have been president. I’m not sure how she came to that conclusion and, as with so many other of her statements in the book, Vitali never explained. Instead, we get patriarchy, evil voters not willing to accept a woman, and more of the same when we elected yet another elderly white man.

It would be easy to sit here and do several lengthy posts picking apart not only the logic of the book, but also the so-called facts as they are presented. But I’ll be honest, my liver would never survive the experience. When I say reading HRC’s What Happened or even her novel, State of Terror, written with Louise Penny, was easier, I’m not lying.

Yes, the book is that bad.

Vitali falls into the same pit many so many so-called journalists have. She makes herself part of the book. No, that’s not quite right. She tries to make herself a major part of the book. Instead of reporting the news, she is trying to be part of it. The result is one of the worst cases of author intrusion I’ve seen in a very long time.

We get prose like the following:

“Hiiii!” Harris said as she walked through the front door of Styled by Nadia, a thrift store in Columbia, South Carolina, on Lady Street–which was exactly what it sounded like: a street of predominantly lady-owned small businesses, most of the owners women of color.

If you could read that without your eyes crossing, you’re a better person than I.

Then you have chapter titles like this: “Memorial Day Weekend. Campaigning While Female”. A chapter that includes the following sentence (and I use that term loosely).

Senators Amy Klobuchar, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Elizabeth Warren spending their holiday weekends barnstorming through Iowa.

Or this:

The 2020 race started with all these women being, some way somehow, compared to and tagged with the baggage of the former Secretary of State, made it clear that Clinton being the only female presidential paradigm in most voters’ recent memories presented a barrier for the women who were trying to pick up where she’d left off.

My brain was hurting by the time I got to this point in the book. Unfortunately, I was only on page 49 of approximately 342 pages.

Where oh where was her copy editor?

I wish I could tell you it gets better, but it doesn’t. The book reads like a first draft, one that didn’t benefit from a good copy editor or content editor. How else do you explain a so-called journalist opening the final chapter of a book published in August 2022 with “I don’t want to alarm you, but there are already people running for president in 2024.” What did she expect? It amazes me that someone proclaiming that they are a seasoned political reporter could write that sort of a statement with a straight face.

I went into this book hoping Vitali would present a well-reasoned, well-researched book that took an in-depth look into why a woman hasn’t reached the Oval Office yet. Yes, I know it was a high hope, one with a higher chance of going unfulfilled than fulfilled. I knew there would be the usual cries of chauvinism and patriarchy. What I hadn’t expected was to find an amateurish attempt at self-aggrandizement.

On the question of whether I’d recommend this book, that’s a big “NOPE!” Not unless you want to use it as a doorstop or as an example of why so-called journalists should be sent back to school to learn what it means to report the news and not try to be part of it.

 

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15 Comments
  • John C. says:

    I have no problem with a capable woman being President; whether a person can pee standing or not is not a relevant skill for the Presidency. Margaret Thatcher demonstrated that a woman can be an effective head of state.

    My only concern about having a woman President has to do with international relations. There are a number of nations that still cling to the archaic notion that the personal combat capability of the head of state indicates the strength and will of the nation. This is why FDR went to such lengths to avoid being photographed in his wheelchair. And a lot of the nations that have this attitude are not our friends, and would see the U.S. with a woman as President as weak, and push to gain advantage.

    The Patriarchy is alive, and strong, but mostly in countries OTHER than the U.S.

    • GWB says:

      Meh. FDR’s avoidance of being seen in a wheelchair was likely more for domestic consumption than overseas. And I don’t think we – if we had an actual strong woman leader* – would see any more antagonism on the world stage than we have seen with 0bama or SlowJoe.

      (* As opposed to just being b**chy and a scold.)

      • Amanda Green says:

        I think you’re right, GWB. We might not have had a female as president, but we’ve had an a strong female Secretary of State in Condolezza Rice. We’ve had other strong women in positions of power who have garnered both respect and fear from our allies and enemies alike.

  • Skillyboo says:

    Why is it assumed that the first female president will be a democrat? Quite a few intelligent, and I stress intelligent, and very viable Republican women candidates. Looking at the list of viable female democrats I find that they all resemble empty suit Kamala who, when she does open her mouth, should learn to keep it shut.

    • GWB says:

      Because no one will allow a Republican woman to survive. The left will attempt to destroy her at every turn. Because all minorities belong to the Dems. All firsts are theirs. There can be no others.

      Just maybe we can take that away from them. But it will take a strong candidate and fighting the “fortifying” of elections.

    • Amanda Green says:

      GWB is right about the assumption. The Dems assume they are the only ones who have a “qualified” female and then they blame the patriarchy, weak women who only vote what their husbands tell them, etc when the Clintons and Klochubars and Warrens fail to win their party nomination, much less the general election.

    • 370H55V I/me/mine says:

      Maybe not in this country, but here are two to watch: Kemi Badenoch in the UK and Leslyn Lewis in Canada–both black women members pf parliament from their countries’ Conservative parties and who, unlike their current leaders, take that name seriously.

  • Linda S Fox says:

    Many women of the Left want to project ‘toughness’, so put on a stern, Karen-like visage, hoping to be seen as strong.
    Nah. Any positive effect from that Tough Act is more than offset by their Limp-Wristed Policies.

  • GWB says:

    then both Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren failing to win the Oval Office in 2020
    Important note: they did not “fail to win the White House.” They failed to even place in their own party to make that contention.

    Instead, we get …
    Well, that is what I expected. But I’m a patriarch, so, naturally…..

    Senators Amy Klobuchar, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Elizabeth Warren spending their holiday weekends barnstorming through Iowa.
    Sadly, this is how journalists write now – in print, on news sites, on Twitter. Grammar is a lost art among those who write for a living. (That is admittedly the most basic part of grammar: “What is a verb?”)

    Where oh where was her copy editor?
    Editor?!? What’s that?

    I’m sorry you had to read that, Amanda. But I’m glad I don’t have to.

    • Amanda Green says:

      I could say it wasn’t that bad, but I’d be lying. I’ve read some awful things for this blog and others but this has them all beat. It was a disappointment because there is a book to be written on the subject–this wasn’t it. It was also a disappointment because, coming from a family of journalists, I expect more from someone who claims to be a member of that particular profession. If I have anything to be thankful for, it’s that I didn’t have nearly enough booze in the house to play a drinking game with the book. If I had, I would have ended up in the hospital with a severe case of alcohol poisoning.

  • American Human says:

    Ms Green, bless your heart for reading this.
    I recall, I think, the movie Air Force One with Glenn Close as the VP (I don’t recall it fondly though, it was rather stupid). When The Big Guy was in trouble, the Cabinet came together and urged her, as VP, to invoke the 25th Amendment. She had a good cry in the room by herself and then said no (or something like this). I came away from this hoping that a POTUS or VPOTUS would never need a good cry before making a landmark decision like this and perhaps it wasn’t such a good idea to have a woman in one of those positions.
    I realize it was just a movie, but it affected me for a long time about women in these positions. I realized after a few years that it was just sheer Hollywood stupidity that did that and plenty of women, Thatcher or Rice for example, would never need that good cry before making the right decision.

    Not that there’s anything wrong with crying.

    • Amanda Green says:

      I remember the movie. It had more holes in it than Swiss cheese. I understand what you’re saying about the Glenn Close scene but also know I’ve seen equally as unbelievable–and unwanted scenes–with male actors in similar roles. So. . . shrug.

  • Cameron says:

    Please tell me you did not pay for the book or you can claim it as an expense on taxes. Because the few snippets were almost painful to read.

  • Amanda Green says:

    Oh, I bought it. I will also try to take it as a tax expense as research for a project I’m working on. After all, isn’t it only fair that the Biden Administration pay for this sort of torture? VBG

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