Reviews

Trump: The Art of the Deal by Donald J. Trump, Tony Schwartz

tcorder's review against another edition

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1.0

I think my favorite part had to be where he was talking about how he would never stoop to the unsavory practices of trying to drive people out of rent controlled apartments by sending in a bunch of junkies and other undesirables and then, just a short time later, bemoans the fact that the City of New York turned down his offer to let homeless people stay in the vacant apartments of a building where he was trying to get rid of the tenants so he could tear the building down to put up a new building with rents that only the wealthiest could afford. Such heart, that guy.

jedimasterroxie's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0

susie77's review

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I got bored with it

frumpleton's review against another edition

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1.0

The Mein Kampf of multi-millionare real estate mogul memoirs. The main interesting thing was googling all the developments mentioned in this book that failed within a decade.

rdjcampos's review

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.75

melanie_nadeane's review

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.0

readerelle's review

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funny inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.0

_npr's review

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4.0

It is an insight into the mind of the current president. What we see today is consistent with where he came from and how he has always behaved and thought. If nothing else, it shows he is genuinely being himself.

hyfen's review

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1.0

Business porn for people who aren't in business. There are parts that are interesting for capturing specific moments in New York and Atlantic City history but since we know tons of the book was just made up (and Trump didn't even have the patience to sit through interviews), it's hard to take much away.

(I bear full responsibility for choosing to waste these hours of my life.)

williamd's review

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Read this out of curiosity. Most of it is quite uninteresting descriptions of daily things Trump was involved in around 1986. You won't be disappointed if you're expecting the kind of self-aggrandizement and bloviating we know him for. Still, it's interesting to get another perspective from what is kind of primary source for understanding the Trump phenomenon. He may not be likeable in this book, but he is less hateful. It's the pre-birther, pre-wall, pre-neo-nazis-are-OK Trump.

That said, some of the warning signs are there. He clearly is not a deep thinker on topics like race relations, like when he makes it clear he doesn't think it's possible for him to have had racial prejudice in his buildings because he did on occasion actually rent to black people (he claims he just wanted to rent to people who seemed like they were more likely to pay their rent, as if that wasn't already a dog-whistle in the 80s). Or when he boasts about how much he is willing to spend to sue people over tiny matters because it helps him beat them down rather than negotiating in good faith. But mostly he's only interested in promoting himself and his business, and has no interest in the difficult larger issues, domestic or foreign, that face the country. Like he is today.

In a way it reminds you that there are a lot of ways DT could be part of our national scene that would be OK, or even positive in a way. He was easy to hate as a reality star, but reality shows are made more interesting by egotistical and obnoxious people. And he may have been an obnoxious billionaire real-estate developer, but at least he got some projects developed. Unfortunately, it reminds you that of all these ways he could be part of the scene, being President is probably the one he's most unsuited for.