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Question of the Day | 11/20/2008 11:00 pm

Are you interested in reading Laura Bush's upcoming autobiography? Why or why not?

© Shutterstock
Joan Ganz Cooney

Joan Ganz Cooney | 11/21/2008 12:00 am

Laura Bush to Tell All? Not According to Joan Ganz Cooney

No. She does not interest me at all. She is the most guarded person I’ve ever met and would not dream of writing what she really thinks about anything or anyone, starting with her husband.
Marlo Thomas

Marlo Thomas | 11/20/2008 11:00 pm

Marlo Thomas: Mr. Bush Is Bad for Laura's Book Sales

Laura Bush wrote an essay in one of my books, and I was happy to discover that she’s a pretty earthy woman. Her story was about one of her earliest memories of lying on a blanket with her mother on their front lawn, looking up at the sky. "And what a sky it was," she wrote. "Mother knew some of the constellations, and she would point them out to me. But mostly we would just gaze up and talk." She carried on that tradition of enjoying the galaxy with her own daughters years later. That gave me a peek into what seems a very good woman and mother. Still, I probably won’t read her book. I’m really not interested in hearing one word more about HIM.
Liz Smith

Liz Smith | 11/20/2008 11:00 pm

Liz Smith Warns Michelle Obama: 'The Wives of Presidents Have a Tough Row to Hoe'

Of course, I am interested in reading Laura Bush’s autobiography. I am interested in anything Mrs. Bush does because she seems to be one of the rare members of the Bush dynasty with great common sense. I even read the novel written about her, American Wife, and I liked her better and better after that. Mrs. Bush is a driving force behind the Texas Book Festival. I think she is a  wonderful woman who married a man she loves, but of whom she sometimes disapproves.  The wives of presidents have a tough row to hoe. She did well in her attitude of disengagement from the negatives. Mrs. Bush’s favorite thing other than reading is to hang out with her Texas girlfriends. This shows an excellent realistic take on life. 

Click here on this text to read my New York Post column.

Sheila Nevins

Sheila Nevins | 11/21/2008 9:00 am

Sheila Nevins Wants Only the Deepest, Darkest Truths

Under Sodium Pentothal or any truth drug, I would want to delve deeply into her sub-conscience. Be this truth serum is not the impetus for the novel; I would not want to read it. It’s her deepest darkest secrets that interest me.

Julia Reed

Julia Reed | 11/21/2008 11:55 am

Julia Reed: Laura Bush Has a Thankless Job

Yes, I’m interested in reading Laura Bush’s autobiography. She’s a lovely, strong, interesting woman who handled a thankless job incredibly well. I also don’t think she’s been given enough credit for some of her activities while in office. She has done far more than read to grade-school children. She has actively supported the people of Burma, speaking out against the prolonged detainment of Aung San Suu Kyi and protesting the treatment of peaceful protesters by the ruling junta. She has urged the international community not to buy Burmese gemstones — which prop up the regime — and has visited the refugee camps on the Thai-Burmese border. Her own private library foundation is responsible for the rebuilding and restocking of countless libraries on the Katrina-ravaged Mississippi Gulf Coast and New Orleans, where she has made 23 visits and also driven school recovery efforts. She has focused attention on two of her husband’s better ideas, the President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI), and the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the largest international health initiative in history to fight a single disease, and has visited ten of the 15 PEPFAR focus countries and ten of the 15 countries aided by PMI.

I could go on about her work, but that’s not what makes her interesting to me. She is warm, has a great sense of humor that few have seen and has a core group of good friends she has known since childhood and to whom she is extraordinarily close and supportive. The first time I did a story on her for Newsweek when she was still First Lady of Texas, we went to lunch with two of these women and I had a blast. They were as bright and warm and hilarious as she is. Every year they take a trip together and go hiking in some national park or whitewater rafting, which I don’t think most people can imagine her doing. 

Also, no matter what you think of the administration, it’s important to have a record of people’s time in the White House. I was at lunch at the White House about three weeks ago. There were some writers like me, some historians, Cokie Roberts, Dee Myers. It was very relaxed and we sat around in the exquisitely restored Green Room downstairs, where she has hung some beautiful 20th-century works of art, and one of the historians urged her to write her memoirs because, he said, the president’s and First Lady’s official papers aren’t released for years, and it is vital for them to put down in their own words their experiences.

Further, it is absurd to transfer the feelings one might have about the president to his wife — or to be rude to her because of him. Once, about two years ago, I had dinner with Mrs. Bush and two other women at Galatoire’s in New Orleans. She had instructed the Secret Service to hang back as she just wanted to relax and have a few laughs before getting up at dawn to go to some schools along the Gulf Coast. And we had barely sat down before the parade started. A man came up and told her that he wished her husband would be tortured like they tortured the prisoners at Abu Graib. It went on and on. When one guy came by and told her that while he thought the president was a monster, he had always liked her, she waited until he had walked off and looked at me and said, "And that’s supposed to make me feel better?" I was embarrassed to my core for my city — hell, for my fellow man. I have enormous respect for her and now I would love to hear what she has to say.

183 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

C jay
And, what now is Ms. Laura doing? Frankly, I’d have come out about this … country before all other concerns when same compromises one’s personal standards : http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20081121/pl_ynews/ynews_pl158 Again, what makes someone so powerless, so dependent!?
By C jay on 11/21/2008 3:47 pm
C jay
For Strong Women Marge Piercy A strong woman is a woman who is straining. A strong woman is a woman standing on tiptoe and lifting a barbell while trying to sing Boris Godunov. A strong woman is a woman at work Cleaning out the cesspool of the ages, and while she shovels, she talks about how she doesn’t mind crying, it opens The ducts of the eyes, and throwing up develops the stomach muscles, and she goes on shoveling with tears in her nose. A strong woman is a woman in whose head a voice is repeating, I told you so, ugly, bad girl, bitch, nag, shrill, witch, ballbuster, nobody will ever love you back, why aren’t you feminine, why aren’t you soft, why aren’t you quiet, why are you dead? A strong woman is a woman determined to do something others are determined not be done. She is pushing up on the bottom of a lead coffin lid. She is trying to raise a manhole cover with her head, she is trying to butt her way through a steel wall. Hear head hurts. People waiting for the hole to be made say, hurry, you’re so strong. A strong woman is a woman bleeding inside. A strong woman is a woman making herself strong every morning while here teeth loosen and her back throbs. Every baby, a tooth, midwives used to say, and now every battle a scar. A strong woman is a mass of scar tissue that aches when it rains and wounds that bleed when you bump them and memories that get up in the night and pace in boots to and fro. A strong woman is a woman who craves love like oxygen or she turns blue choking. A strong woman is a woman who loves strongly and weeps strongly and is strongly terrified and has strong needs. A strong woman is strong in words, in action, in connection, in feeling; she is not strong as a stone but as a wolf suckling her young. Strength is not in her, but she enacts it as the wind fills a sail. What comforts her is others loving her equally for the strength and for the weakness from which it issues, lightning from a cloud. Lightning stuns. In rain, the clouds disperse, flowing through us. Strong is what we make each other. Until we are all strong together, a strong woman is a woman strongly afraid. ©
By C jay on 11/21/2008 3:51 pm
Linda Bauer
First Lady is a unique venue to view world events. Yes, I would like to hear what the woman has to say. Linda Bauer
By Linda Bauer on 11/21/2008 4:05 pm
newzie snoozie
WELL IF I WERE ASKED I’D SAY- I WILL NOT BE READING THE BOOK BECAUSE I DID KEEP UP WITH HER AS SHE WAS AHMAKINHERAHMOVES. WHAT A VERY BUSY LADY OF THE HOUSE SHE HAS BEEN. I CAN APPRECIATE WHAT ALL SHE HAS DONE TO HELP THE AIDES PROJECTS. SHE NEVER PLAYED FAVORITES I WOULD SAY. SHE WENT HERE AND SHE WENT THERE. SHE HAS CONTRIBUTED. THE WAY SHE HAS HER OWN PERSONAL LOVE FOR OUR GOD (THERE IS ONLY ONE REAL GOD. OUR REAL GOD WAS NOT PICKED FROM 350 OTHER gods JUST BY CHANCE) . HAVE ANY OF YOU EVER HEARD THE LADY REALLY PRAY? HAVE ANY OF YOU EVER WATCHED HER MOVE? HAVE ANY OF YOU EVER SEEN HER PLEAD WITH GOD TO HELP HER OPICK OUT WHICH WAY TO GO ? LIKE NORTH-SOUTH-EAST OR WEST THIS TIME OT HELP OUT ANY WAY THAT SHE COULD. I BET NOT. THE WAY MOST OF YOU DO CARRY ON IS IF YOU HAVN’T HIRED THE CLOSEST NEIGHBORHOOD JACKASS TO KICK SOME ONES ASS FOR YOU THAT YOU CAN’T BE SEEN EVEN FROWING AT. THEN THAT PERSON IS A NO ACCOUNT BITCH THAT IS NOT TO BE CONSIDERED A LADY AT ALL IN ANY WAY. GOD HAVE MERCY ON US WHO DO SEEM TO APPEAR THAT WAY. HELP US ALL TO KNOW WE SHALL SEE HIM FACE TO FACE AND HE IS A GONNA SAY -SORRY I NEVER KNEW YOU, GO SERVE THE ONE THAT YOU DID SERVE WHILE ON EARTH. MANY OF YOU ARE GOING OT BE DANGLING IN THE MID AIR WATCHING MANY OF US AS WE STEP INTO THAT BEAUTIFUL GOLD STREET CITY AND THE LIGHT THAT SHINE WILL NEVER BE SEEN BY YOU BITCHES OUT THERE.
By newzie snoozie on 11/21/2008 6:40 pm
Patrice Baldwin
To me, Laura Bush is a non-entity. She hasn’t impacted my life in any way, and I don’t like her politics, so I’m not interested in her.
By Patrice Baldwin on 11/21/2008 7:37 pm
Patrice Baldwin
Please Newzie, lower case. Don’t shout so much.
By Patrice Baldwin on 11/21/2008 7:38 pm
Delete This
Patrice….FYI…Newzie has a vision problem so she types in caps….
By Delete This on 11/21/2008 11:52 pm
Dora M
Let’s see… a cardboard cut-out of a woman who speaks in cautious platitudes and who stood by her man while he decimated the Constitution, started an illegal and immoral war, plundered our economy for the sake of lining his corporate cohorts’ pockets, destroyed all the good will we had from the rest of the world and is arrogant and dense enough to think that history will exonerate him? Uh, yeah, won’t be rushing out to buy that book… I cannot wait for us to be able to put all the Bushies far behind us.
By Dora M on 11/21/2008 9:01 pm
Ina  Rivera
NO!!!! Didn’t care to hear what her husband had to say, don’t care to hear from her either. Nothing either one of them have to say is important. Never was, never will be. People will just waist their time and money. Haven’t they stolen enough from us already. Didn’t we (american people) learn anything these past eight years!
By Ina Rivera on 11/22/2008 5:02 am
Gisela Schmidt
No, she is so guarded and politically correct I don’t think it would be interesting. I think her mother in law, Barbra Bush, would be far more interesting.
By Gisela Schmidt on 11/22/2008 2:44 pm
Susan B
Absolutely. She must have a fascinating story to tell and I’d love to read it. The first question I’ll want answered is, “Why did you marry HIM?”
By Susan B on 11/22/2008 4:58 pm
Dona Howlett
Merrel g, I heard Barbara Bush being interviewed on the Larry King show a couple of years ago.. I could not beleive when she looked at Larry and pronounced that when people criticize her son George it makes her furious. She said “My son George is perfect” (she was dead serious) She then went on to gush and comment about how wonderful her twin granddaughters were. At the time they were in the news for being drunk in public. That Bush bunch are a weird family.
By Dona Howlett on 11/24/2008 5:51 am
Dona Howlett
I meant to add…………I really feel sorry for Laura. I wouldn’t want Barbara Bush as my Mother in law. It seems to me when they are all seen in public together it’s very cold between Laura and Barbara. I think she rules that family with an Iron Rod…………….
By Dona Howlett on 11/24/2008 5:55 am
Dona Howlett
Merrell g, So Right………………
By Dona Howlett on 11/25/2008 11:31 pm
Lori F.
Even Oliver Stone movie “W” could not bring out the baddest of Laura Bush. She is truly a very good and decent woman. Whatever her husband may or may not have done, this is a very smart and wise woman. Judging her based on her husband is just flat wrong. But I could not help but notice that the liberal female hosts on this site like Marlo Thomas and that Joan Cooney woman set a very find example of judging the book first! What has Thomas and Cooney ever done anyway?
By Lori F. on 11/23/2008 6:35 am