Peggy Noonan was a special assistant to President Ronald Reagan from 1984 to 1986; in 1988, she was chief speechwriter to Vice President George Bush during his campaign for presidency; in 1989, she left Washington, D.C., for her native New York, where she completed her first book, the bestselling What I Saw at the Revolution: A Political Life in the Reagan Years. Since that time, her articles and essays have appeared in Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Forbes, and many other publications. She is also author of The Case Against Hillary Clinton, a #1 New York Times bestseller. Currently, she is a columnist and contributing editor at The Wall Street Journal and a political contributor for Fox News. She lives in New York City.
“A welcome oasis in the desert of political memoirs... likely to be
the most honest, lucid and enjoyable look at the Reagan White House
that we’ll get.”
—The Dallas Morning News
“An engaging book, the story of how a plucky and talented young
person literally wrote her way into a previously all-male
domain.”
—The Washington Post Book World
“Noonan has written the funniest, most richly textured, nervously
self-effacing and deftly observed political memoir...to come out of
the 1980s.” —Time
"A welcome oasis in the desert of political memoirs... likely to be
the most honest, lucid and enjoyable look at the Reagan White House
that we'll get."
-The Dallas Morning News
"An engaging book, the story of how a plucky and talented young
person literally wrote her way into a previously all-male
domain."
-The Washington Post Book World
"Noonan has written the funniest, most richly textured, nervously
self-effacing and deftly observed political memoir...to come out of
the 1980s." -Time
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