- Remnick Is 'Making It Look Easy' The New York Times' Stephanie Clifford really lays on the praise. In his triple-role as New Yorker editor, occasional New Yorker writer, and now book author, "Mr. Remnick works hard to seem as if he is not working hard." Clifford adds, "Mr. Remnick stands out at the [Conde Nast] 4 Times Square headquarters in other ways. He takes the subway to work, not a town car, and lacks the imperiousness or mercurialness that surround other celebrity editors."
- A Beautiful, Ambitious Book USA Today's Susan Page calls it "beautifully written and exhaustively researched." She also says it is "sprawling" and "ambitious."
- And So Long! Politico's Michael Calderone whistles. "Although David Remnick has been known to pound out 10,000 to 20,000-word pieces while still editing The New Yorker, I still expected a slimmer volume on Obama — perhaps expanding on his Joshua Generation piece — rather than a full biography stretching over 670 pages."
- Best Obama Book Yet? In the Washington Post, Gwen Ifill says previous attempts have been lacking. "In the hands of other writers, Obama has proved to be a murky character study." But not Remnick. "A less admiring author -- one who did not invest the considerable time Remnick did ... -- might have spun this tale more harshly," she writes. "Remnick deserves credit for telling Obama's story more completely than others, for lending a reporter's zeal to the task, for not ducking the discussion of race and for peeling back several layers of the onion that is Barack Obama."
- Even When It's Weak, It's Strong NPR's Susan Gilman beams that the book "is very much like its subject: even-handed, eloquent, beautifully packaged." Her criticism is couched in praise. "His biography is well-researched and articulated but contains nothing earth-shattering. How can it? Without resorting to tabloid journalism, the best Remnick can do is elaborate on the facts, delve into the footnotes, expand upon the broader historical contexts. And here's where 'The Bridge' is strongest."
- 'The Best Anyone Could Hope For' Even Gawker's Hamilton Nolan, typically a searing skeptic of all things Condé Nast, can't resist. "Remnick is perfect for his time and place in the industry. He's no-nonsense, budget-conscious, and a wise cultivator of talent; he's also a Princeton man and a willing cultivator of The New Yorker's insular traditions," he writes. "Remnick is the best that anyone could hope for (which is to say, he's excellent)."
Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments or send an email to the author at mfisher at theatlantic dot com. You can share ideas for stories on the Open Wire.



User Comments
Please type your comment and click Post. If you’re not already logged in you will be prompted to log in or register