
Reviewer & Author Interviewer, Norm Goldman. Norm is the Publisher & Editor of Bookpleasures.com.
He has been reviewing books for the past twenty years after retiring from the legal profession.
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Author: Mary L. Trump, PH.D.
Publisher: Simon &Schuster
ISBN: 978-1-9821-4146-2
Writing a bombshell of a
book where you hang out to dry your family's dirty laundry for all to
see comes with its challenges. And this is the troublesome situation
that Mary L. Trump found herself in with Too Much and Never Enough:
How My Family Created The World's Most Dangerous Man.
Author: Mary L. Trump, PH.D.
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
ISBN: 978-1-9821-4146-2
Writing a bombshell of a
book where you hang out to dry your family's dirty laundry for all to
see comes with its challenges. And this is the troublesome situation
that Mary L. Trump found herself in with Too Much and Never Enough:
How My Family Created The World's Most Dangerous Man.
These
demands include conducting comprehensive research, recalling events
during which you were not present, reconstructing dialogue, intimate
conversations with family members, friends, neighbors, and
associates. Assembling these into a compelling narrative is no simple
accomplishment. Yet, the author pulled it off without putting me to
sleep.
Mary is the daughter of Donald's older brother Freddie. She
holds a Ph.D. from the Dermer Institute of Advanced Psychological
Studies and taught graduate courses in trauma, psycho-pathology, and
developmental psychology.
Much of Mary's early childhood was spent
in her grandparents' large home in Queens, New York. It was here
where Donald and his siblings grew up, and where Mary had first-hand
experiences about the dysfunctionality of the Trump family.
What
was unsettling for Mary and the key reason for creating her book was
when Donald ran for President and elected. She sensed she was
watching her family history, and Donald's important role in it,
playing out on a grand scale.
As many have reported in the past,
Mary points out that Donald's administration and his party have
become subsumed by his politics of grievance and entitlement. He
understands nothing about history, constitutional principles,
geopolitics, diplomacy, and above all, was never pushed to disclose
such education.
She further spells out: "to understand what
brought Donald-and all of us-to this point, we need to start with her
grandfather and his own need for recognition, a need that propelled
him to encourage Donald's reckless hyperbole and unearned confidence
that hid Donald's pathological weaknesses and insecurities."
Donald's pathologies are complex, and his performances often strange
that to arrive at an appropriate and comprehensive diagnosis would
call for a full battery of psychological and neuro psychological
assessments. It is problematic he would sit for these tests.
A
good deal of the book devotes itself to Fred's rapport with his sons
Donald and Freddie. Freddie had suffered from alcoholism and died at
forty-two when Mary was sixteen. Mary characterizes much of her
father's misfortune because his father broke him by regularly
devaluing and diminishing every aspect of his psyche. No matter how
hard Freddie tried to satisfy his father, he never lived up to his
father's expectations. On the other hand, she emphasizes that Donald
escaped this same outcome because his temperament served his father's
purpose. She describes her grandfather as a sociopath who used Donald
towards his ends, "ruthlessly and efficiently, with no tolerance
for dissent or resistance."
Donald learned how to engage with
the nastier side of dealing with contractors and navigating the
political and financial power structures that bolstered the business
of New York City real estate. This skill was a trait that meant a
great deal to Fred, and he used this to his advantage when building
many of his projects. Another quality that can be traced back to Fred
was never taking responsibility for anything other than
successes.
According to Mary, it is challenging to identify
Donald's job description precisely in the family business. It seems
it included exaggerating about his so-called successes concerning
specific projects. His fabrication capacity would come in exceedingly
useful in the future and helped mold the smooth, superficial
impression he would come to both represent and embody. These were
traits his father appreciated and enabled him to reproduce.
Among
other matters that Mary probes are the family's dynamics involving
other members of the family covering Donald's younger brother and
sisters. Mary reveals how one of Donald's sisters, Maryanne, who had
been an assistant district attorney in New Jersey, was appointed a
judge as a result of the influence Roy Cohn, Donald's attorney with
the Attorney General Ed Meese.
There is also the reference of the New
York Times article of Oct 2, 2018 that discovered massive amounts of
alleged fraud and quasi-legal and illegal activities of the Trump
family that stretched over several decades. We likewise read about
the opposing of her grandfather's will that disowned Mary and her
brother. They were denied their father's interest in the vast
estate.
Given the generally critical tone of the book, it's no
surprise that Donald and none of his siblings are interviewed.
Donald's younger brother, Robert, tried to block the publication of
the book. He filed a temporary restraining order claiming that the
book violated Mary's nondisclosure agreement she signed in 2001 when
she agreed to settle her grandfather's estate. However, the judge
eventually ruled that "constitutional law trumps contracts"
and permitted the book's release. Amazingly, the book sold 950,000
copies by the end of its first day of publication by Simon &
Schuster.
Mary L. Trump performs a splendid job of shedding
fascinating light on Donald Trump and his family, but the more light
is shed, the further revolting Donald shows up.