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Something Lost, Something Gained

Reflections on Life, Love, and Liberty

Audiobook
2 of 8 copies available
2 of 8 copies available
Includes a new epilogue narrated by the author exclusively for the audiobook edition.
What would it be like to sit down for an impassioned, entertaining conversation with Hillary Clinton? In Something Lost, Something Gained, Hillary offers her candid views on life and love, politics, liberty, democracy, the threats we face, and the future within our reach.
She describes the strength she draws from her deepest friendships, her Methodist faith, and the nearly fifty years she's been married to President Bill Clinton—all with the wisdom that comes from looking back on a full life with fresh eyes. She takes us along as she returns to the classroom as a college professor, enjoys the bonds inside the exclusive club of former First Ladies, moves past her dream of being president, and dives into new activism for women and democracy.

From canoeing with an ex-Nazi trying to deprogram white supremacists to sweltering with salt farmers in the desert trying to adapt to the climate crisis in India, Hillary brings us to the front lines of our biggest challenges. For the first time, Hillary shares the story of her operation to evacuate Afghan women to safety in the harrowing final days of America's longest war. But we also meet the brave women dissidents defying dictators around the world, gain new personal insights about her old adversary Vladimir Putin, and learn the best ways that worried parents can protect kids from toxic technology. We also hear her fervent and persuasive warning to all American voters. In the end, Something Lost, Something Gained is a testament to the idea that the personal is political, and the political is personal, providing a blueprint for what each of us can do to make our lives better.

Hillary has "looked at life from both sides now." In these pages, she shares the latest chapter of her inspiring life and shows us how to age with grace and keep moving forward, with grit, joy, purpose, and a sense of humor.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      As narrator, former First Lady, Secretary of State, and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton sometimes sounds like a friend dropping by to chat. She discusses her grandchildren, cozy moments at home, and gatherings with longtime friends. But her memoir is also part political commentary and part Washington insider gossip, as well as an in-depth analysis of the current status of American democracy. She recounts historical events, such as evacuating vulnerable women from Afghanistan, and at those times her voice is tense and dramatic. A terrifying chapter describes what the country would face with a second Trump presidency. While Clinton has her own political bias, she is in a unique position to illuminate events that have impacted the world and current threats to our nation's liberty. D.L.G. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 7, 2024
      Former secretary of state Clinton (What Happened) mashes together impassioned arguments about what’s at stake in the 2024 election with heartfelt stories about her life in this confusing memoir. Addressing the reader as if sitting beside her “at a dinner party,” Clinton serves both “the broccoli and the ice cream”—the “political and personal.” Rather than the intended “rewarding meal,” this approach generates whiplash-inducing transitions, such as a leap from a poignant reflection on her late mother to an apocalyptic fantasy of a “Rip Van Reader” waking to Donald Trump’s second term, replete with “soldiers patrolling the streets” and “smog blanketing the sky.” Throughout, Clinton maintains a pointed focus on her 2016 rival, and the book sometimes reads as if written by a current presidential candidate, with tedious chapter-long dives into hot-button issues (abortion rights; children’s social media use). Pockets of inspiration emerge when Clinton recalls her career-long advocacy for women, and her personal anecdotes offer much needed levity (she named her “postmenopausal belly... ‘Beulah’”). Yet these moments are overshadowed by abundant needling at conservatives and progressives alike, from asserting that Trump’s inner circle “may well be on the Kremlin’s payroll” to admonishing anti–Gaza war protestors to educate themselves beyond “propaganda... served up by... the Chinese Communist Party on TikTok.” The overall effect is that of reading a compendium of rage-baiting, attention-grabbing headlines.

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