From our correspondent in Washington
Fifty years after bringing down Richard Nixon by exposing the Watergate scandal in 1974, Bob Woodward takes on another president, perhaps even more controversial than “Tricky Dick” (“Richard the Scrambler”). Nickname Nixon).
But this time, instead of exposing the secret machinations of a president whose mistrust bordered on paranoia, the most famous journalist in the United States is attacking Trump thanks to the confessions of the concerned person himself.
Read also:
Rage, the shocking book that shakes Trump's campaign
In seventeen telephone conversations, all duly recorded with Trump's agreement, Bob Woodward gathered the most devastating testimony from the president's own mouth.
The very title,
Rage
, is suggested by Trump.
“
I stir up rage,
” he had told Woodward, “
I've always had that effect.
I don't know if that's an asset or a weakness, but anyway, that's what I'm arousing.
Woodward himself warned Trump that the book would be uncompromising.
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