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Going Rogue: An American Life
 
 

Going Rogue: An American Life [Kindle Edition]

Sarah Palin
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Review

Sarah Palin's autobiography has topped best-seller lists even before reaching the shops.
Advance sales of the former vice presidential candidate's memoirs have taken Going Rogue: An American Life to the top spot on Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble's website...The initial print run of 1.5 million equalled that for the late Senator Edward Kennedy's memoirs, while pre-publication sales have overtaken Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol and fellow conservative Glenn Beck's Arguing with Idiots...
--The Daily Telegraph, 1 October 2009

Palin biography makes waves
Palinmania is back. But can the poster girl of the Right ever be a serious contender for the White House?
...Going Rogue is an illumination...Now that I have read Going Rogue, I see her in more dimensions but I am just as scared of her... --The Times, 21 November 2009

Sarah Palin: We're losing - eat some carbs
The US vice-presidential candidate tells how she got a shock when campaign chiefs proposed a new strategy - a nutritionist
--The Sunday Times, 22 November 2009 - EXTRACT

Product Description

One year ago, Sarah Palin burst onto the national political stage like a comet. Yet even now, few Americans know who this remarkable woman really is.

On September 3, 2008 Alaska Governor and vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin delivered a speech at the Republican National Convention that electrified the nation and instantly made her one of the most recognizable women in the world.

As chief executive of America's largest state, she had built a record as a reformer who cast aside politics-as-usual and pushed through changes other politicians only talked about: Energy independence. Ethics reform. And the biggest private sector infrastructure project in U.S. history. And while revitalizing public school funding and ensuring the state met its responsibilities to seniors and Alaska Native populations, Palin also beat the political "good ol' boys club" at their own game and brought Big Oil to heel.

Like her GOP running mate, John McCain, Palin wasn't a packaged and over-produced candidate. She was a Main Street American woman: a working mom, wife of a blue collar union man, and mother of five children, the eldest of whom was serving his country in a yearlong deployment in Iraq and the youngest, an infant with special needs. Palin's hometown story touched a populist nerve, rallying hundreds of thousands of ordinary Americans to the GOP ticket.

But as the campaign unfolded, Palin became a lightning rod for both praise and criticism. Supporters called her "refreshing" and "honest," a kitchen-table public servant they felt would fight for their interests. Opponents derided her as a wide-eyed Pollyanna unprepared for national leadership. But none of them knew the real Sarah Palin.

In this eagerly anticipated memoir, Palin paints an intimate portrait of growing up in the wilds of Alaska; meeting her lifelong love; her decision to enter politics; the importance of faith and family; and the unique joys and trials of life as a high-profile working mother. She also opens up for the first time about the 2008 presidential race, providing a rare, mom's-eye view of high-stakes national politics—from patriots dedicated to "Country First" to slick politicos bent on winning at any cost.

Going Rogue traces one ordinary citizen's extraordinary journey and imparts Palin's vision of a way forward for America and her unfailing hope in the greatest nation on earth.


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1683 KB
  • Print Length: 448 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins e-books (26 Dec 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B002ZW5UH4
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #75,938 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By James Gallen TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
"Going Rogue" invites the reader into Sarah Palin's living room, gubernatorial office, campaign trail and the vision she has for America. We become familiar with her youth, her life with Todd and their family, her vocational and political rise and her dealings with the powerful. What emerges from this book is a woman who has struggled with challenges and emerged with successes and failures, triumph and heartbreak. We read of her motivation to bring change to Wasilla and stand up to the forces that used Alaska's resources for their gain rather than the benefit of Alaskans. Finally we ride the campaign trail with her as she flies out of Alaskan politics and into the "Big Leagues." Some of the anecdotes are amusing. Perhaps my favorite was the surprise when they got to the convention and saw all of the clothes that had been picked out for them. Sarah could not understand why they could not wear their own clothes. "Do we really look that bad?" The insider view of the campaign is eye opening. The fact that the campaign did such a good job in shopping for the Palins illustrates the detail to which handlers go in packaging their product. The gall in sending all of the clothes to Alaska after the campaign, only to have them sent back, seems a bit much. Getting a bill for the "vetting process" because they lost seems totally unreasonable but, I guess, that is life in the "Bigs."

What impressed me the most about Sarah's political moxy is the way she took on the special interests and negotiated energy concessions while cleaning up the corruption that had taken control of much of the Alaskan body politic. I came out with more respect for her abilities and thinking that she could be as good secretary of Energy.

This book is well written and never lost my interest. I have read and reviewed other autobiographies by political candidates, including "Worth The fighting For" by John McCain and "Standing Firm" by Dan Quayle. Without taking anything from either of them, "Going Rogue" beats them hands down.

This book bought me to the conclusion that Sarah Palin is a regular American, the closest thing we have come to in high office in a long time. She has had to raise children, pay bills, hold down jobs and improve her community. She has not just talked the pro-life talk, she has walked the walk. She tells how she and Todd bore the heartbreak of knowing that they would have a Down's Syndrome child and how he has blessed their lives. She rears up like a Mama Grizzly when her brood is attacked by the press and politicos. At the end, Sarah shares her vision for America, an America in which initiative is not smothered by regulations and taxation imposed by elites who think they know better how to live our lives than we do, an America in which ordinary people can make their contributions in all spheres and at all levels. After reading this book I hope that Sarah has a role in molding that America.
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Surprisingly Good 31 Mar 2011
Format:Hardcover
I bought this book soon after it was published but have just got round to reading it. Of course, Mrs Palin's prospects of becoming America's first woman President have become much less rosy in the past year and so her book will be less interesting to new readers.

She comes across as a surprisingly thoughtful lady as well as almost an embarrassingly religious one. In my country faith is not something to be paraded in public as Mrs Palin does. It is to America's credit that the hostility and indifference to religion that prevail in the UK are not present to such an extent in the great Republic.

I realise that hers is a one-sided account, but it is the first time that I have seen her side of the story and it left me feeling sorry for her. Nobody deserves the vicious personal attacks and wicked character assassination that she and her family were subjected to. Her lack of bitterness does her great credit.

If, as I expect, she fades away into obscurity, this will not be America's - or our - gain.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Peter Durward Harris #1 HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Prior to reading this book, I knew little about either Sarah Palin or Alaska and I was interested to learn more about both, especially the book's author. Mrs Palin was serving as the governor of Alaska when she was offered the chance to run for vice-president in the 2008 American presidential election. She has very similar political beliefs to Margaret Thatcher, but they have very different backgrounds and personalities, as I learned by reading this book. Indeed, Mrs Palin's personality has some similarities with Princess Diana, both being populists with an endearing charisma as well as a rebel streak. Mrs Palin's mix of populism and Thatcherism is perfect for her fans, but is regarded as very dangerous by her critics.

I realized early on in this book that I was going to enjoy reading it because Mrs Palin's story is both interesting and well-written. She makes summer in Alaska sound wonderful, although acknowledging that the winters are long and harsh. She discusses many aspects of her life and it is clear that she has strong views on a number of issues.

Although not directly relevant to her political career, perhaps the most intriguing question about her beliefs concerns her stance on the origin of species. At first glance, Mrs Palin appears to be a full-blooded creationist, but she denies this. Apparently, she accepts what she calls microevolution, in which species change and evolve over time, but not that people are related to apes or monkeys. Her stance is interesting, but I prefer to accept Darwin`s theory, despite the proof of it still being incomplete.

Not having studied the American political scene closely, I'll leave others to judge the accuracy of the main story, but the politics as described here is explosive stuff. Corruption in Alaska, tales of in-fighting within the Republican party and dirty tricks played by some Democrats - all rather sad, but I'll say straight away that similar things happen elsewhere in the world including Britain. Hey, the summer of 2009 was dominated by the expenses scandal at Westminster, while all British political parties of any significance have had their internal fights at one time or another, in between playing dirty tricks on each other. So in one form or another, most of the political stuff here doesn't surprise me, but some of it is shocking nevertheless.

An unconventional politician in many way, Mrs Palin nevertheless appears to have brought about significant changes in a number of areas in her home state of Alaska, which may seem to many people (especially in my country) like a frozen wasteland, but which is rich in natural resources and occupies a vast land area, approximately equivalent to France, Spain, Italy and the UK combined. So being governor of Alaska is not equivalent to running a small local council in Britain even though it is sparsely populated (fewer people live there than in the county of Leicestershire in which I live). I suspect that the position of state governor may be equivalent to being leader of the Welsh assembly. The biggest Alaskan story by far in my adult lifetime was the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster, which Mrs Palin covers briefly; she later had plenty of political fights with the oil companies (including BP as well as ExxonMobil and others) in her time as state governor.

Mrs Palin has drawn plenty of criticism from a variety of sources and uses the opportunity that this book affords to hit back at those critics, often explaining how things have been distorted by the media. Having had my own relatively minor experience of being in British national newspapers, I have sympathy with victims of media distortion, so I don't blame Mrs Palin for hitting back via this book, but I can see that others will react badly. At least my story was a one-day wonder with no lasting consequences, but things are different for those who go into politics, sport or showbiz.

Mrs Palin clearly isn't impressed by the way the Republican presidential campaign was handled, and clearly feels that she wasn't able to contribute effectively to the campaign, but the aftermath was even worse. While some Republicans were happy to cast her as the scapegoat, some Democrats launched a sustained campaign against her that exploited freedom of information laws. Ultimately, this created problems for the legislative process as well as personal difficulties for the Palin family, all described in detail, causing Mrs Palin to decide that she had to quit as governor with a year still to run, even though she was never found guilty of anything. As she acknowledges, that decision to quit may kill her political career, but Mrs Palin says that did what she felt was right for Alaska. Inevitably in such situations, people will believe whatever they choose to.

I expect Mrs Palin will return to public life in some capacity eventually. That might be as a presidential candidate, but it might alternatively be as champion of a cause dear to her heart. Her vice-presidential campaign generated enormous hope among disabled people, while her love of Alaska makes her passionate about environmental issues. So there's two obvious issues, but I'm sure there are others.

Would I vote for Mrs Palin, given the chance? I don't know because I`d need to know more about issues not discussed in this book, but I'd like the option.

I can see why this book - and the author - are so controversial. Fans of Mrs Palin will love this book, while critics will be furious. Both are likely to have their opinions reinforced by reading this book. Coming from a position of ignorance, I'll just say that I found this book to be compulsive reading.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Beware!
Following the Democrat's pasting in the recent mid-terms, I figured I'd read this to see what all these flag-sucking morons found so 'awesome' about this woman. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Mars
A wind of change in American politics.
Even if you're not politically minded, this is a very informative, entertaining, and engrossing book. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Mr. C. T. Brand
An American Journey in Politics
This seem more of a memoir than an autobiography but it gives us a quick introduction to Sarah Palins' life in Alaska growing up, how she met her husband. Read more
Published 22 months ago by M. A. Ramos
North To Alaska
The liberal American establishment does not like Sarah Palin. She represents everything American liberals hate in a woman - she's an outsider, an achiever and, as far as one can... Read more
Published on 18 May 2010 by Neutral
Unrelated to Michael
I'm still not quite sure why I ordered this book, or why I have an interest in Sarah Palin. I've yet to finish it but it's an interesting read. Read more
Published on 22 Jan 2010 by Pilipala
A good read though the main interest is in the earlier years
A very well written book by Sarah Palin and especially the story of her early years and overcoming prejudice against women in Alaska. Read more
Published on 19 Jan 2010 by Mr. J. Butler
Loved it
This book really changed my opinion on the Republican philosophy, and made things clear that I had never understood before. She writes well, talks sense, and is nobody's fool. Read more
Published on 5 Jan 2010 by A. Davis
we've not heard the last from sarah
No need to introduce the author of this memoir because in a relatively short period of time she has become one of the most widely known and discussed women in America. Read more
Published on 19 Dec 2009 by Gail Cooke
What a load of....
It's gratifying to see that Sarah Palin has notched up so many sales of this ridiculous book, since several of her personal attacks on her political campaign seem to centre around... Read more
Published on 14 Dec 2009 by Michael Watson
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