Member Reviews
At the very first sight, it is very frustrating to be taken accountable for the politics in your home country. What is your fault that the majority of your countrymen and women decided to vote for someone that not only does not make sense from the point of view of global leadership, but exhibits a toxic mix of alt-right, sexism and intellectual incapacity to understand basic concepts of public accountability - like, for instance conflict of interest? However, when you are represented by such a character at least a little bit of worries and questioning your ´national soul´ should follow because, at the end of the day, it has to do with your present and future. In other words, can you - or how can you - live in a country that at least for the next four years will be moulded based on the political choices of such a president and his well chosen team?
Paula DiPerna is a strategic global environmentalist, writer, political writer that run for the US Congress on behalf of the Democrats. She was involved on behalf of Hillary Clinton and has the occasion to know some areas of the ´deep America´, that, not so surprising, given the political context of at least two decades - poverty, industrial decline among other causes -, voted for Trump.
The result of the elections requested a moment or two of coming at terms with the reality, she wrote. ´(...) for many of us who call the USA our home, Trump´s election felt like a moment of deep soul-searching. How to spend these four years? More ceaseless opinion making? More noise? More critique? What?´
DiPerna did not have too much time for reflection though, busy commuting all over the world, either professionally or visiting friends. London, Paris, Morocco, Amsterdam, China, South Korea, Thailand, South Africa, Finland, Germany. She travels across borders and languages, often being pitied by taxi drivers or random encounters for coming from Trump´s America.
Sometimes she shares historical and cultural details about the places she visits, sometimes she is just out of time for more than a business meeting and changing airplanes. Her Travels in the Time of Trump are often hectic, like trying to get herself tired enough to forget about what she is running from. This is also a way to deal with such a situation, but the soul searching exposed at the beginning is rather forgotten because the travel fever gives you a certain strength and illusion that you belong to the global world and nothing can get worse. You feel yourself a global citizen, although with a lucky passport in your pocket, no matter who is living at the White House for now.
Honestly, I was expecting more political focus and eventually, some interesting reflection on the causes and consequences of those times. Indeed, I am the kind of reader and traveler that believe that the priviledge of travel brings higher responsibilities. When you have the chance to see so much of the world, why not understand how important freedom and human rights and accountability are and fight for them with all your might back home? Otherwise, dropping capital cities and global meetings doesn´t impress me at all.
This book was not quite what I expected from the description and cover. I was looking for more detail on the world's reaction to the Trump craziness. Writing itself was fine but it didn't really hold my interest as much as I would have liked.
My thanks to NetGalley for providing me with an eARC in exchange for my honest review.
Well-written but somewhat rambling and couldn't hold my attention. I think this book will appeal to people, just not everyone.
I was really looking forward to reading this but found it slight both in terms of length and content.
Paula DiPerna is an exceptionally talented and incisive writer but there was far too much about her travels throughout 2017, albeit with some wonderfully acute descriptions of people and places in the likes of South Africa, London, China and the Far East but much less comment on the Trump administration and its deleterious impact on the world than I had expected.
The book needed filling out or even thinning down into a magazine piece rather than the short book it ended up as.
I was in Italy when Trump was elected and since Italy has been the most notable producer of absurdities in politics in Europe, anyone I spoke to then said that they were happy since the US electing Donald Trump meant that they were no longer the biggest joke in politics.
When I read the title and synopsis on this I thought it would be a good read but unfortunately it is a very dry hard to read book. It more a political biography of the author then about the worlds responce to the Trump administration.