Your rating:
Politics is a test of wills in a sharp, funny, and emotional novel about truth and consequences by the New York Times bestselling author.Cleo McDougal is a born politician. From congresswoman to senator, the magnetic, ambitious single mother now has her eye on the White House—always looking forward, never back. Until an estranged childhood friend shreds her in an op-ed hit piece gone viral.With seven words—“Cleo McDougal is not a good person”—the presidential hopeful has gone from in control to damage control, and not just in Washington but in life.Enter Cleo’s “regrets list” of 233 and counting. Her chief of staff has a brilliant idea: pick the top ten, make amends during a media blitz, and repair her reputation. But there are regrets, and there are regrets: like her broken relationship with her sister, her affair with a law school professor…and the regret too big to even say out loud.But with risk comes reward, and as Cleo makes both peace and amends with her past, she becomes more empowered than ever to tackle her career, confront the hypocrites out to destroy her, and open her heart to what matters most—one regret at a time.
No posts yet
Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update
Your rating:
The book was generally engaging. Cleo is a highly flawed person (though by no means a villain or antihero), and I appreciated that there is character growth by the end of the novel. This isn’t a book I’m likely to reread, but I enjoyed it.