Michael Wolff has received numerous awards for his work, including two National Magazine Awards. He has been a regular columnist for Vanity Fair, New York, The Hollywood Reporter, British GQ, USA Today, and The Guardian. He is the author of several books, including the bestselling Burn Rate and The Man Who Owns the News. He lives in Manhattan and has four children.
#1 New York Times Bestseller Named a Best Book of the Year by The
Guardian, Kirkus Reviews, The Sunday Times, The Observer, and
Financial Times
"What makes Fire and Fury important is that it is not just about
Trump, but a product of the same culture that produced Trump: It is
'reality' journalism, in the same way that Trump is a 'reality'
character." --The Atlantic "It is not a book. It is the book. If
there is only one book Washington political reporters will read
this year...then this is it.... [Wolff] is a wicked stylist and
keen observer, with a justly earned reputation for approaching his
subjects with fangs bared and talons sharpened.... A perfect karmic
delivery system."--The Weekly Standard "The pages of Wolff's book
are littered with insults and intrigue, backstabbing and
dysfunction."--The Washington Post
"To the many ironies of Donald Trump's presidency can be added the
fact that a man who does not read books has helped cause a
publishing sensation.... Mr Wolff's muckraking skills, cattiness,
cynicism and feel for human weakness, especially among the rich and
famous, make him well-qualified for the job."--The Economist "An
undeniably juicy chronicle of a presidential administration that in
just one year has been beset by numerous scandals and crises....
[Wolff] gives the reader a you-are-there sense of events without
resorting to an unneeded dramatic writing style." --The San
Francisco Chronicle "Wolff's lasting achievement here is not his
headline-grabbing revelations but the skillful, enthralling, and
utterly terrifying way he depicts the unqualified, unprepared, and
downright unusual characters to be found wandering the halls of the
White House in the first half of 2017 as well as their near
bloodsport-level conflicts." --Entertainment Weekly "What makes the
book significant is its sly, hilarious portrait of a hollow man,
into the black hole of whose needy, greedy ego the whole world has
virtually vanished."--The Guardian "The White House has naturally
denied and decried Wolff's account, but even if it's only halfway
accurate, it presents an appalling view of a frighteningly
unqualified and unprepared gang that can't think straight."--Kirkus
Reviews
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