A review by housedesignerking
Promises to Keep: On Life and Politics by Joe Biden

challenging emotional hopeful inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.0

After this former Vice President announced his candidacy for the Presidency (USA), I decided to read his autobiography from his 2008 attempt at the presidency. This was before he even knew he was going to be a VP running mate. It ended up taking me 7 months to finish this book. Not for lack of interest, but rather lack of interest to read (I tend to fall in and out of the reading desire). I didn't really read it for 7 straight months. According to my notes (offline), the last time I'd read this before picking it up again on March 15th of this year was back in October. I always intended on finishing this book before Election day of this year.

In his book (which according to one of the very last pages, he actually <i>did</i> write this, unlike a lot of politicians who have their books written by ghostwriters), he takes the reader through his political life. To be bluntly honest, chunks of it were not pleasant to read. Not because of any inability to write on his part, but because sometimes, life sucks. His second and current wife is named Jill, but he lost his first wife Neilia in a car crash. That was difficult enough to read about, but add to it that he also lost his daughter Naomi <i>and</i> was just elected to his first term as Senator of Delaware, and you can see why he almost left politics. The other two parts that were difficult to read about were on the former Yugoslavia and the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. This book was <i>mostly</i> written (admittedly with the editing assistance of someone named Mark Zwonitzer) coherently and in a way that tells the reader that Biden was literally traveling through his memory to write this. I've read books where that method has come off as "foggy recall," but Biden managed to avoid that. Although, I was a bit confused for a moment when he went from talking about the Violence Against Women Act of 1990 right into the Yugoslavian breakup with no bridge or segue way. Not sure if that's Biden's or Zwonitzer's.

At the end of the book, he kind of glosses over W. Bush’s second term in a way that made me feel like he may have run out of time to write it himself. 

I'm going to give this four stars. The only thing I really disagree with was on page 118. Biden mentions that after he married his current wife, there were comments made by his son Beau. "Jill, aren't you ever going to do the laundry?" and "You should probably do it everyday." He was a kid, so it's not an all-together big deal (and I do <i>not</i> wish to speak ill of the passed away), but this would have <i>never</i> slid under my parents' roof. Jill somehow was perfectly fine with this, though. *shrugs*

Edit 2/3/23: I have become somewhat disappointed in this former vice president and candidate for President and eventual president-elect and President. Suffice to say that I am personally pro-life and a member of the lgbt community, and I'm what you'd call a moderate republican, so in supporting him -- a supposed moderate politician -- and seeing what his first term brought, I am now less likely to support him in the 2024 election. I guess it really depends who becomes the republican nominee.

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