
Rage
Reviews

I can’t believe the things people say to one of the most famous journalists in the world.

I read news coverage of and excerpts from Rage prior to actually listening to the complete audiobook. At first I was appalled that Woodward didn’t warn the country about the severity and scope of the Coronavirus when he had knowledge of it. His most credible defense is that he didn’t know if the President was telling the truth. Based in these interviews, I can see his point. Throughout this book, Trump comes across as a narcissist who is focused only on making himself look and sound great. He’s not delusional in that he knows he angers a lot of people. It’s just that he doesn’t care. If something is difficult, he finds someone or something else to blame. Woodward did recount some of the difficulties the US faced in the early days of COVID trying to get info out of China. Apparently there was serious stonewalling and obfuscation from PRC. But still. More could have and should have been done. It was a near total lack of executive leadership that got America into our current situation (Oct 2020). There are damning yet unsurprising comments that Trump makes, such as him refusing to acknowledge his white privilege, that reinforce his tone-deaf approach to governing. In the audiobook version, some choice recordings are make available that really bring it all home. Rage? More like Outrage!

Bob Woodward is an excellent reporter who does the utmost to depict former President Trump's time in office in a fair light. I enjoyed the amount of attention paid to foreign policy - a topic that dominates nearly the entire book - as it is an aspect of my personal interest and arguably one of Trump's worst failings. There were several issues with quotation marks I noticed, and the pivot the book makes from the North Korean issues to the COVID-19 crisis is a bit abrupt. Nonetheless, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Good riddance to an administration full of corruption and incompetence.















