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The Politician: An Insider's Account of John Edwards's Pursuit of the Presidency and the Scandal That Brought Him Down

Average Customer Rating: 4.0
Release Date: 2010-01-30
Publisher:Thomas Dunne Books
Author Andrew Young
Number of pages:320
ISBN:031264065X
Language:Unknown: English; Original Language: English; Published: English;

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“The greatest political saga, the one that has it all, that gets to the real heart of American politics, is the John Edwards story... This isn’t just politics, it’s literature. It’s the great American novel, the kind that isn’t written anymore.” --Michael Wolff on John Edwards's trajectory, on VanityFair.com

The underside of modern American politics -- raw ambition, manipulation, and deception -- are revealed in detail by Andrew Young’s riveting account of a presidential hopeful’s meteoric rise and scandalous fall.  Like a non-fiction version of All the King’s Men, The Politician offers a truly disturbing, even shocking perspective on the risks taken and tactics employed by a man determined to rule the most powerful nation on earth. 

Idealistic and ambitious, Andrew Young volunteered for the John Edwards campaign for Senate in 1998 and quickly became the candidate’s right hand man. As the senator became a national star, Young’s responsibilities grew.  For a decade he was this politician’s confidant and he was assured he was ‘like family.”  In time, however, Young was drawn into a series of questionable assignments that culminated with Edwards asking him to help conceal the Senator’s ongoing adultery. Days before the 2008 presidential primaries began, Young gained international notoriety when he told the world that he was the father of a child being carried by a woman named Rielle Hunter, who was actually the senator’s mistress. While Young began a life on the run, hiding from the press with his family and alleged mistress, John Edwards continued to pursue the presidency and then the Vice Presidency in the future Obama administration.

Young had been the senator’s closest aide and most trusted friend.  He believed that John Edwards could be a great president, and was assured throughout the cover-up that his boss and friend would ultimately step forward to both tell the truth and protect his aide’s career. Neither promise was kept.  Not only a moving personal account of Andrew Young’s political education, THE POLITICIAN offers a look at the trajectory which made John Edwards the ideal Democratic candidate for president, and the hubris which brought him down, leaving his career, his marriage and his dreams in ashes.

 

 

Features

  • ISBN13: 9780312640651
  • Condition: New
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  • Customer reviews


    « unbelievable »
    This book shows you that reality is more outrageous than fiction. Young has written this book with great accuracy and an eye for detail. The tasks he has to perform for "his family Edwards" become increasingly absurd until the final sacrifice he is asked to make in acknowledging a child that is not his. It is a real page turner and a thriller until the end.
    Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2010-08-23
    « Tawdry but compelling »
    This is so tawdry, I felt guilty reading it and a little dirty when I had finished. Not only does John Edwards come across as the quintessential narcissist, his wife is portrayed as a shrieking mad woman and the mother of his new child appears to be at least three quarters drug fuddled and high maintenance in the extreme. If a quarter of the information in this book is true, then frankly everyone needs a long, cold shower and to be removed from society forthwith; a truly awful bunch of people.
    Interestingly, the worst character in the book has to be the author. There is no doubt he was treated unbelievably badly but what level of self worth leads you to basically act as a butler for 10 years (often at the expense of focus on your own family) and then take responsibility for fathering a child that wasn't yours and go on the run with the mystery woman, your wife and your three children with no idea of how the story might play out? Something tells me Edwards didn'(tm)t need to try too hard to convince Andrew Young to do some of these mad things and that worries me.
    An amazing book which I hope is all a bunch of lies, lest my faith in human kind will be permanently destroyed. I am unsure whether I should click that I recommend it, the events are so filthy as to be slightly depressing. Oh what the hell, I will recommend it, if only to allow you to learn some of Mrs Edwards' charming voicemail technique.
    Oh promise of power, is there nothing you can't wreck?!
    Rating: (4 out of 5) @ 2010-08-22
    « Hate does not equal good »
    I got this book out off the "sale rack" hoping to find some great inside on Presidential Campaigns. Instead I found a book written by a very angry man. This book is painful and slow. It took me two months to finish it because I really felt the need to speak on it. The author Andrew Young may have felt this book cleared his name but it really made him look foolish and even more so like an evil guy. Next time Andrew please find forgiveness in your heart for yourself before you publish such a book. There is so much to say I don't know where to start.

    1.) Mr. Young believes he is more powerful then he is and would still be in politics as an adviser if he didn't write this book.

    2.) This book never gives you any reason to like John Edwards or even why we should have liked him.

    3.) The underlining vibe is the Mr. Young hated Mrs. Edwards and went along with the affair with Rielle because he hoped John would divorce his wife and marry Rielle. The only part of the book worth reading is the early days of the affair when you feel John and Andrew both have some life in them.

    4.) How dare Mr. Young lecture the Edwards at the end of the book. What an idiot! Mr. Young supported and promoted the affair AND he brought his wife and family in on the deal. You dirtied your whole family! How dare you speak in judgement.

    5.) Mr. Young's wife is the only person you feel is sane in this whole book.

    6.) When ever Mr. Young compliments the Edwards he always throws a quick low blow in. Very third grade of him.

    7.) Mr. Young loved power and loved the power the affair game him.

    8.) I did learn that if your boss is an immoral man then it is best to leave early because it never has a happy ending.

    9.) Please read a few pages of this at the book store before you buy it. It may be the first time I read a book and feel worse for doing so.

    10.) I pray that Mr. Young turns his life around and since his father's story toaught him nothing...I hope this hands on experience will educate him.

    I know you are reading this and figure I'm someone involved in this whole thing but I'm just a guy from Arkansas who likes reading political books...good ones.
    Rating: (1 out of 5) @ 2010-08-19
    « A Great Read »
    So far so good. Easy reading, I have enjoyed this book so far. It has been very interesting to the inside world of the Politicians. I highly recommend this.
    Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2010-08-09
    « Poor judgment by both Edwardses and the author »
    I'd already heard most of the sound bites before I "picked this up" [I read it on my Kindle], but I wanted somebody to take me through the story and explain why a guy would absolutely fall on his sword for John Edwards, even claiming he was the father of his mistress's baby! I sort of get the drill here, though the author's wife seems to be the only sensible one in the family, and I'm amazed that she was unable to shut all this down way before it exploded. Edwards is seen as a preening, delusional narcissist; his wife a shrill, delusional harpie; yet both assiduously weaving the spell that seduced the author: "we're working for a higher purpose here." Most rational people would have quit Edwards's employ about five, six years before this guy did [he essentially becomes a "Hollywood personal assistant": I would have preferred homelessness, and I like to eat] but still. Edwards let me down even more than Bill Clinton, because unlike Bubba, I always thought Edwards's heart was genuinely in the right place. Not any more, not even his wife's. Even accounting for the sour-grapes "setting the record straight" nature of this book, I don't want John Edwards anywhere near an elective office ever again, and I will try to make this the last time I even think about him.
    Rating: (3 out of 5) @ 2010-08-04
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