"[Rabin-Havt] offers an intimate portrait of his cranky boss, writing about everything from Sanders's famous mittens, to his love of picket lines and Motown songs, to his distaste for 'the inane droning of cable news commentators,' to his prescient fear that Donald Trump was 'nuts' and would upend democracy." —Maureen Dowd, New York Times
The Fighting Soul is an unforgettable chronicle of life on the road with Bernie Sanders and the first in-depth portrait of this fiercely independent, and famously private, left-wing firebrand. As a close advisor and deputy campaign manager on Sanders's most recent presidential campaign, the tireless Ari Rabin-Havt spent more hours between 2017 and 2020 with the Vermont senator than anyone else. The Fighting Soul is a behind-the-scenes account of Sanders's run, including his heart attack in Las Vegas, his notorious debate encounter with fellow progressive Elizabeth Warren, and a momentous private conversation between Sanders and Barack Obama. Revelatory and heartfelt, The Fighting Soul depicts the rare politician motivated by principle, not power.-
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April 26, 2022 -
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- ISBN: 9781631498800
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- ISBN: 9781631498800
- File size: 14379 KB
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- English
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Reviews
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Library Journal
November 1, 2021
An aide to Sen. Bernie Sanders from 2017 to 2021 and deputy campaign manager for his 2020 presidential campaign, Rabin-Havt gives readers a you-are-there account of the campaign from its first meeting through Sanders's heart attack and faceoff with Sen. Elizabeth Warren to his final defeat in the primaries. The aim is to show the candidate's commitment to working-class concerns and his young supporters and his often-hidden sense of humor. The senator's fans will love it.
Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly
January 17, 2022
The maverick socialist senator from Vermont flouts the norms of presidential politics in this rollicking campaign memoir. Rabin-Havt (Lies Incorporated), deputy manager of Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign, catalogues the ways in which Sanders defied the rules: he disdained polls; eschewed big-money fund-raising; avoided schmoozing with Democratic potentates (though he embraced ideological soulmate Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez); remained clueless about celebrity culture; and was “genuinely confused and uncomfortable” about his own late-in-life fame. What Sanders did do, tirelessly, was talk about inequality, injustice, and progressive policies—especially Medicare for All—to audiences large and small, in any and every situation. (Riding in an ambulance to the hospital during a heart attack, Rabin-Havt reports, Sanders questioned the paramedics about their insurance status and views on the healthcare system.) Rabin-Havt’s account of the Democratic primary race is breezy, colorful, and often insightful, but also evasive in blaming Sanders’s defeat on the Democratic Party establishment’s animus toward him without considering whether his left-wing politics were acceptable to most voters. Still, the portrait of Sanders as a crusty but caring man, passionately committed to principles and the interests of working-class people, vividly shows why he is one of America’s most influential politicians. Photos. Agent: Will Lippincott, Aevitas Creative Management. -
Kirkus
February 15, 2022
The deputy campaign manager for Bernie Sanders tells war stories from the 2020 presidential run. "Could Bernie Sanders have won the presidency?" asks Rabin-Havt toward the end of this eventful account. Though Donald Trump was a distant target, Sanders did note that "at its most basic, this election is about preserving democracy." His real opponents were the members of the Democratic establishment. "The Democratic Party is a disorganized institution," writes the author, "but it would organize against Bernie Sanders in a way they had not against any candidate--Democratic or Republican. Bernie's premonition that the establishment would never let us win was coming to pass." Granted, Sanders called himself a socialist and challenged the Democrats on numerous matters of principle and practice. Rabin-Havt portrays Sanders as alternately genially irreverent ("That, Ari, is a giant motherfucking windmill," he noted while passing by a wind farm) and singularly focused, micromanagerial down to the details of a campaign bumper sticker and insistent on staying in small hotel rooms--not out of any political symbolism but because he likes to sleep in cold rooms, and big rooms take too long to cool down. More to the point, Sanders had unyielding views, among them that "his own words [are] sacrosanct," meaning every word of every speech and bill went under his pen; and that government, particularly at a local level, can be an instrument for change for the good. Rabin-Havt delivers an admirable portrait of his candidate, but of more interest to students of applied politics are the numerous episodes in which he explores the art of political calculus: how Sanders decided, for instance, to attack Pete Buttigieg among the field of candidates in the Iowa caucuses as "the candidate of the wealthy elite," along with the horse trading involved in Sanders' "Medicare for All" plan. Among the better campaign confessionals and just the thing for presidential-politics wonks.COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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