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U.S. Politics & Government - 20th Century, U.S. Politics & Government - 1992-2001, Presidents of the United States - Biography, Presidents of the United States - General & Miscellaneous, General & Miscellaneous U.S. Political Biography, General & Miscella
All Too Human by George Stephanopoulos β€” book cover

All Too Human

by George Stephanopoulos
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Overview

All Too Human is a new-generation political memoir, written from the refreshing perspective of one who got his hands on the levers of awesome power at an early age. At thirty, the author was at Bill Clinton's side during the presidential campaign of 1992, & for the next five years he was rarely more than a step away from the president & his other advisers at every important moment of the first term. What Liar's Poker did to Wall Street, this book will do to politics. It is an irreverent & intimate portrait of how the nation's weighty business is conducted by people whose egos & idiosyncrasies are no sturdier than anyone else's. Including sharp portraits of the Clintons, Al Gore, Dick Morris, Colin Powell, & scores of others, as well as candid & revelatory accounts of the famous debacles & triumphs of an administration that constantly went over the top, All Too Human is, like its author, a brilliant combination of pragmatic insight & idealism. It is destined to be the most important & enduring book to come out of the Clinton administration.

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Editorials

Fortune

...Stephanopoulos is admirably blunt....But he lacks skepticism about the class of permanent, pompous Washingtonians he has now joined in all but his address.

Garry Wills

In his self-flagellating self-promotion β€” a way of climbing on his knees β€” Stephanopoulos regrets that his vanity at times made it harder for him to advance his sound views.
β€” The New York Times Book Review

Walter Kirn

[Stephanopoulos] tells his calculated story well, with a novelist's flair for sketching scenes and characters.
β€” New York Magazine

Jonathan Alter

Mostly this is welcome confession, and not just because it has the benefit of sounding sincere. The reflective, honest tone makes this book essential for anyone trying to understand life inside big-time politics. It's free of the too-tidy anecdotes that clog most political memoirs. The stories ring real, and they're well rendered.
β€” New York Observer

Michiko Kakutani

...[C]andid and highly readable....a far cry from the devastating indictments of previous administrations offered by other insiders....fueled less by any score-settling agenda than by an insider's preoccupation with process and a natural storyteller's fondness for vivid characters and anecdotes...
β€”The New York Times

Dick Morris

...[T]he most gripping tale of a man's successful battle against his conscience since Albert Speer's cliffhanger Inside the Third Reich....[T]he real tragedy of Stephanopoulos' book [:] He is unhappy in his own skin....He should be very proud of his abilities. Instead, he aspires to a sainthood that he will never reach.
β€”National Review

KLIATT

This best-selling memoir of Stephanopoulos's experiences in the 1992 and 1996 presidential elections, and as an aide to Clinton in his first term, is a compelling political story. It is an intelligent, emotional examination of an intense experience by a young man, just in his early 30s, who helps put a man in the White House and then is part of the group that shapes and molds policy once there. So much has been written and spoken about these experiences, there is little reason to rehash details in this review. What is important to think about is how Stephanopoulos's personal story will resonate among students. I believe that those who take politics seriously, who hope someday to work in the political system for programs and policies they hold dear, will find these memoirs riveting. Stephanopoulos bares his heart. He isn't some political hack or bureaucrat, he isn't a middle-aged politicianβ€”he is a young idealistic man, with an immigrant heritage that molds his character and ideas; he is haunted by fears of rejection and highly critical of mistakes. Although he is intelligent and wise, he is inexperienced. The pressure led him to depression and anxiety; stressed out, he got out five years after he got inβ€”a classic burnt-out case. This could well turn out to be a classic work of political writing, late 20th century. KLIATT Codes: A*β€”Exceptional book, recommended for advanced students, and adults. 1999, Little Brown/Back Bay, 456p, 21cm, illus, bibliog, 99-13817, $14.95. Ages 17 to adult. Reviewer: Claire Rosser; May 2000 (Vol. 34 No. 3)

Library Journal

National fame came early to Stephanopoulos, who by age 31 was President Clintons first director of communications until he was promoted to the vaguely defined, vulnerable position of senior advisor. He views Clinton as the best politician he has ever known, who could have accomplished much more if he were a better person. First Lady Hillary Clinton is portrayed as fiercely loyal and at times inflexible and ambitious. Ultimately, Stephanopolous fell out of favor for being a traditional liberal in an administration that increasingly believed that the era of big government was dead and also because he was a reputed news leaker, a charge he denies. The strengths of the book are also its weaknesses. An engaging, self-deprecating style, similar to that of Robert Reich, Clintons first secretary of labor (Locked in the Cabinet, LJ 4/1/97), is marred by an overabundance of italicized comments representing rejoinders that could have been used with devastating effect in confrontations but werent. A forthright honesty about his own faults dissolves into self-pity during an extended section on his fights with his major political foe, Dick Morris, the pollster who was brought on board to improve Clintons image but departed when his telephone antics with a prostitute were discovered. Stephanopoulos resigned at the end of the first term and recently condemned the Lewinsky affair as Clintons abandonment of presidential policies and more than a few trusted advisors in order to save himself. Overall, a fascinating if controversial insiders account of life inside the Clinton pressure cooker administration during its early years. A required purchase for public libraries.Karl Helicher, Upper Merion Twp. Lib., King of Prussia, PA

Katha Pollitt

Stephanopoulos's account of White House misadventures is just as self-serving as [Monica's Story], but his book, while much better written, is a little harder to take....[D]id Stephanopoulos betray the President by writing this book? There is certainly something distasteful about the whole project.
β€” The New Republic

Gabriel Schoenfeld

The book may not tell us anything wholly new about the Clinton presidency, but it does...[add] authoritative emphases that could come only from one who saw it up close....For...what [it reveals] of the abysses to which the American political class has sunk, we owe a small measure of debt to George Stephanopoulos's...confessions.
β€” Commentary

Alex Tresniowski

...[A]s a knowing, slightly cynical treatise on modern politics, All Too Human really hums....a classic morality tale.
β€” People Magazine

James N. Thurman

No doubt anecdotally significant to historians, the book for present-day news junkies will be interesting reading....[C]onveys a lukewarm scolding to a gifted and idealistic President whom Stephanopoulos believes wasted a golden opportunity.
β€” The Christian Science Monitor

Byron York

...[A]t least we now have what all those subpoenas couldn't unearth: George Stephanopoulos's memories of life with Bill Clinton. Whether we have the real story is another question altogether...."[W]hen I worked for Clinton I had been willing to suspend my disbelief about some of his more suspect denials," [he writes]. Perhaps the most astonishing thing...is that Stephanopoulos apparently expects us to believe that.
β€” The American Spectator

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2000
Publisher
Boston : Little, Brown, c1999.
Pages
484
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780316930161

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