Breaking History: A White House Memoir was derided as the self-serving, selective musings of “a clean-cut young real estate heir who happened to unwrap a lot of Big Macs alongside his father-in-law” by Times book critic Dwight Garner. Mr. Kushner talks about his deal-making acumen while spouting a series of clichés in the tone of a “college admissions essay,” Mr. Garner writes. “Kushner looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” concludes Mr. Garner, while ignoring the “chaos, alienating allies, breaking laws and rules, flirting with dictators.” Kushner, 41, is praised for his book by his colleagues, who alternately call him a “genius,” “amazing” and one of the “best lobbyists.” A therapist might see this as a “cry for help,” Mr. Garner writes. Kushner has been considered the second most powerful person in the White House after Trump and has been tasked with a vast array of responsibilities from resolving Middle East peace, fixing the opioid crisis, reshaping the Republican Party and running the 2020 re-election campaign. . He often locked horns with other members of Trump’s inner circle and drove away several loyalists, including Corey Lewandowski and Steve Bannon. Mr. Garner writes that Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, begged him to stay out of international affairs, and he too was removed from office in a presidential tweet soon after. Jared Kushner “looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” writes New York Times book critic Dwight Garner. (Harper Collins) “Once in the White House, Kushner became a little Jack Horner, sticking a thumb in everyone else’s pie and wondering why they disliked him.” The memoir delves into Charles Kushner’s father’s imprisonment after he hired a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law and sent footage of the encounter to his sister. Kushner Jr. accuses then-United States Attorney Chris Christie of pursuing the case overzealously. He also talks briefly about his courtship with Ivanka, during which they dined on the French Riviera with Rupert Murdoch, Billy Joel and Bono. But the majority of the nearly 500-page tome focuses on Mr. Kushner’s four years in the White House and contains only the briefest references to the Jan. 6 riots or the fictitious claims of voter fraud promoted by his father-in-law. Kushner’s faith in Trump “remains absolute.” “This book is like a tour of a once-grand 18th-century log house, now burned to the ground, focusing solely on and rejoicing in what remains among the ashes: the two bathtubs, the dirt road and the mailbox, ,” writes Mr. Garner.
title: “Jared Kushner S Memoir Called Lifeless In Brutal First Review Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-17” author: “Ladawn Violette”
Breaking History: A White House Memoir was derided as the self-serving, selective musings of “a clean-cut young real estate heir who happened to unwrap a lot of Big Macs alongside his father-in-law” by Times book critic Dwight Garner. Mr. Kushner talks about his deal-making acumen while spouting a series of clichés in the tone of a “college admissions essay,” Mr. Garner writes. “Kushner looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” concludes Mr. Garner, while ignoring the “chaos, alienating allies, breaking laws and rules, flirting with dictators.” Kushner, 41, is praised for his book by his colleagues, who alternately call him a “genius,” “amazing” and one of the “best lobbyists.” A therapist might see this as a “cry for help,” Mr. Garner writes. Kushner has been considered the second most powerful person in the White House after Trump and has been tasked with a vast array of responsibilities from resolving Middle East peace, fixing the opioid crisis, reshaping the Republican Party and running the 2020 re-election campaign. . He often locked horns with other members of Trump’s inner circle and drove away several loyalists, including Corey Lewandowski and Steve Bannon. Mr. Garner writes that Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, begged him to stay out of international affairs, and he too was removed from office in a presidential tweet soon after. Jared Kushner “looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” writes New York Times book critic Dwight Garner. (Harper Collins) “Once in the White House, Kushner became a little Jack Horner, sticking a thumb in everyone else’s pie and wondering why they disliked him.” The memoir delves into Charles Kushner’s father’s imprisonment after he hired a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law and sent footage of the encounter to his sister. Kushner Jr. accuses then-United States Attorney Chris Christie of pursuing the case overzealously. He also talks briefly about his courtship with Ivanka, during which they dined on the French Riviera with Rupert Murdoch, Billy Joel and Bono. But the majority of the nearly 500-page tome focuses on Mr. Kushner’s four years in the White House and contains only the briefest references to the Jan. 6 riots or the fictitious claims of voter fraud promoted by his father-in-law. Kushner’s faith in Trump “remains absolute.” “This book is like a tour of a once-grand 18th-century log house, now burned to the ground, focusing solely on and rejoicing in what remains among the ashes: the two bathtubs, the dirt road and the mailbox, ,” writes Mr. Garner.
title: “Jared Kushner S Memoir Called Lifeless In Brutal First Review Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-19” author: “Josephine Wender”
Breaking History: A White House Memoir was derided as the self-serving, selective musings of “a clean-cut young real estate heir who happened to unwrap a lot of Big Macs alongside his father-in-law” by Times book critic Dwight Garner. Mr. Kushner talks about his deal-making acumen while spouting a series of clichés in the tone of a “college admissions essay,” Mr. Garner writes. “Kushner looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” concludes Mr. Garner, while ignoring the “chaos, alienating allies, breaking laws and rules, flirting with dictators.” Kushner, 41, is praised for his book by his colleagues, who alternately call him a “genius,” “amazing” and one of the “best lobbyists.” A therapist might see this as a “cry for help,” Mr. Garner writes. Kushner has been considered the second most powerful person in the White House after Trump and has been tasked with a vast array of responsibilities from resolving Middle East peace, fixing the opioid crisis, reshaping the Republican Party and running the 2020 re-election campaign. . He often locked horns with other members of Trump’s inner circle and drove away several loyalists, including Corey Lewandowski and Steve Bannon. Mr. Garner writes that Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, begged him to stay out of international affairs, and he too was removed from office in a presidential tweet soon after. Jared Kushner “looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” writes New York Times book critic Dwight Garner. (Harper Collins) “Once in the White House, Kushner became a little Jack Horner, sticking a thumb in everyone else’s pie and wondering why they disliked him.” The memoir delves into Charles Kushner’s father’s imprisonment after he hired a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law and sent footage of the encounter to his sister. Kushner Jr. accuses then-United States Attorney Chris Christie of pursuing the case overzealously. He also talks briefly about his courtship with Ivanka, during which they dined on the French Riviera with Rupert Murdoch, Billy Joel and Bono. But the majority of the nearly 500-page tome focuses on Mr. Kushner’s four years in the White House and contains only the briefest references to the Jan. 6 riots or the fictitious claims of voter fraud promoted by his father-in-law. Kushner’s faith in Trump “remains absolute.” “This book is like a tour of a once-grand 18th-century log house, now burned to the ground, focusing solely on and rejoicing in what remains among the ashes: the two bathtubs, the dirt road and the mailbox, ,” writes Mr. Garner.
title: “Jared Kushner S Memoir Called Lifeless In Brutal First Review Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-02” author: “Sheri Balint”
Breaking History: A White House Memoir was derided as the self-serving, selective musings of “a clean-cut young real estate heir who happened to unwrap a lot of Big Macs alongside his father-in-law” by Times book critic Dwight Garner. Mr. Kushner talks about his deal-making acumen while spouting a series of clichés in the tone of a “college admissions essay,” Mr. Garner writes. “Kushner looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” concludes Mr. Garner, while ignoring the “chaos, alienating allies, breaking laws and rules, flirting with dictators.” Kushner, 41, is praised for his book by his colleagues, who alternately call him a “genius,” “amazing” and one of the “best lobbyists.” A therapist might see this as a “cry for help,” Mr. Garner writes. Kushner has been considered the second most powerful person in the White House after Trump and has been tasked with a vast array of responsibilities from resolving Middle East peace, fixing the opioid crisis, reshaping the Republican Party and running the 2020 re-election campaign. . He often locked horns with other members of Trump’s inner circle and drove away several loyalists, including Corey Lewandowski and Steve Bannon. Mr. Garner writes that Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, begged him to stay out of international affairs, and he too was removed from office in a presidential tweet soon after. Jared Kushner “looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” writes New York Times book critic Dwight Garner. (Harper Collins) “Once in the White House, Kushner became a little Jack Horner, sticking a thumb in everyone else’s pie and wondering why they disliked him.” The memoir delves into Charles Kushner’s father’s imprisonment after he hired a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law and sent footage of the encounter to his sister. Kushner Jr. accuses then-United States Attorney Chris Christie of pursuing the case overzealously. He also talks briefly about his courtship with Ivanka, during which they dined on the French Riviera with Rupert Murdoch, Billy Joel and Bono. But the majority of the nearly 500-page tome focuses on Mr. Kushner’s four years in the White House and contains only the briefest references to the Jan. 6 riots or the fictitious claims of voter fraud promoted by his father-in-law. Kushner’s faith in Trump “remains absolute.” “This book is like a tour of a once-grand 18th-century log house, now burned to the ground, focusing solely on and rejoicing in what remains among the ashes: the two bathtubs, the dirt road and the mailbox, ,” writes Mr. Garner.
title: “Jared Kushner S Memoir Called Lifeless In Brutal First Review Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-04” author: “Eleanor Reyes”
Breaking History: A White House Memoir was derided as the self-serving, selective musings of “a clean-cut young real estate heir who happened to unwrap a lot of Big Macs alongside his father-in-law” by Times book critic Dwight Garner. Mr. Kushner talks about his deal-making acumen while spouting a series of clichés in the tone of a “college admissions essay,” Mr. Garner writes. “Kushner looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” concludes Mr. Garner, while ignoring the “chaos, alienating allies, breaking laws and rules, flirting with dictators.” Kushner, 41, is praised for his book by his colleagues, who alternately call him a “genius,” “amazing” and one of the “best lobbyists.” A therapist might see this as a “cry for help,” Mr. Garner writes. Kushner has been considered the second most powerful person in the White House after Trump and has been tasked with a vast array of responsibilities from resolving Middle East peace, fixing the opioid crisis, reshaping the Republican Party and running the 2020 re-election campaign. . He often locked horns with other members of Trump’s inner circle and drove away several loyalists, including Corey Lewandowski and Steve Bannon. Mr. Garner writes that Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, begged him to stay out of international affairs, and he too was removed from office in a presidential tweet soon after. Jared Kushner “looks like a mannequin and writes like one,” writes New York Times book critic Dwight Garner. (Harper Collins) “Once in the White House, Kushner became a little Jack Horner, sticking a thumb in everyone else’s pie and wondering why they disliked him.” The memoir delves into Charles Kushner’s father’s imprisonment after he hired a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law and sent footage of the encounter to his sister. Kushner Jr. accuses then-United States Attorney Chris Christie of pursuing the case overzealously. He also talks briefly about his courtship with Ivanka, during which they dined on the French Riviera with Rupert Murdoch, Billy Joel and Bono. But the majority of the nearly 500-page tome focuses on Mr. Kushner’s four years in the White House and contains only the briefest references to the Jan. 6 riots or the fictitious claims of voter fraud promoted by his father-in-law. Kushner’s faith in Trump “remains absolute.” “This book is like a tour of a once-grand 18th-century log house, now burned to the ground, focusing solely on and rejoicing in what remains among the ashes: the two bathtubs, the dirt road and the mailbox, ,” writes Mr. Garner.