So help me God

Mike Pence, 1959-

Book - 2022

"Mike Pence spent more hours in the Oval Office than any of his predecessors. On the surface, the affable evangelical Christian from a gas-station-owning family in Indiana wouldn't seem to have much in common with a brash real estate mogul from New York. But the unlikely duo formed a tight bond. Pence was at Donald Trump's side when he enacted historic tax relief, when he decided to take more assertive stances toward China and North Korea, and when he appointed three Supreme Court justices. But the relationship broke down after the 2020 election. On January 6, 2021, as the president pressured him to overturn the election, a mob erected a gallows on Capitol Hill and its members chanted "Hang Mike Pence!" as they ramp...aged through the halls of Congress. The vice president refused to leave the Capitol, and once the riot was quelled, he reconvened Congress to complete the work of a peaceful transfer of power. So Help Me God is the chronicle of the events and people who forged Mike Pence's character and led him to that historic moment. His father, a Korean War combat veteran, was a formidable influence, but so was the Indiana history professor who inspired his devotion to the Constitution. And it was in college and law school that he embraced his Christian faith and met the love of his life, Karen--the two pillars that support him every day. You will read how his early political career was full of missteps that humbled him and how, as a talk radio host, Pence found his voice and the path that led him to Congress, the governor's office in Indiana, and back to Washington as vice president"--Dust jacket flap.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

BIOGRAPHY/Pence, Mike
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Pence, Mike Checked In
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Pence, Mike Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Mike Pence, 1959- (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
ix, 542 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982190330
  • Prelude
  • Chapter 1. Climb Your Own Mountain
  • Chapter 2. Bends in the River
  • Chapter 3. The Beautiful Brunette with the Guitar
  • Chapter 4. Reaching for Dreams, Enduring Loss
  • Chapter 5. Done Dreaming
  • Chapter 6. Time to Serve
  • Chapter 7. The War on Terror Begins
  • Chapter 8. Defending Limited Government
  • Chapter 9. Life and Liberty
  • Chapter 10. Closer to Home
  • Chapter 11. Take It Around the Block and See What It Can Do
  • Chapter 12. Doing the Right Thing the Right Way
  • Chapter 13. Lessons Learned Defending Religious Freedom
  • Chapter 14. Changing Direction
  • Chapter 15. "Mike, It's Gonna Be Great!"
  • Chapter 16. Hoosier, Hummingbird, and Harmony
  • Chapter 17. "Knock the Cover off the Ball"
  • Chapter 18. "That Doesn't Look like Second Place to Me"
  • Chapter 19. Dead Sprint
  • Chapter 20. With My Right Hand Raised
  • Chapter 21. Be Informed. Be Prepared. Be of Service.
  • Chapter 22. And So It Begins
  • Chapter 23. America First, Not America Alone
  • Chapter 24. The Hermit Kingdom
  • Chapter 25. The Summer of Russia
  • Chapter 26. New Frontiers
  • Chapter 27. Repeal and Replace
  • Chapter 28. Fire and Unexpected Fury
  • Chapter 29. Stay and Fight
  • Chapter 30. Promises Kept
  • Chapter 31. On a Foundation of Faith
  • Chapter 32. Maximum Pressure
  • Chapter 33. Heal Our Land
  • Chapter 34. Blessed
  • Chapter 35. Peace Begins with Strength
  • Chapter 36. Righteous Indignation
  • Chapter 37. Dialogue Is Good
  • Chapter 38. Go Fix This
  • Chapter 39. Changing of the Guard and Walking in the Ruins of Evil
  • Chapter 40. No Collusion, No Obstruction
  • Chapter 41. Onward and Upward
  • Chapter 42. Trade and Travel
  • Chapter 43. A Less-than-Perfect Phone Call
  • Chapter 44. A Cease-Fire and Justice Served
  • Chapter 45. History Shows Up
  • Chapter 46. Only in America
  • Chapter 47. Overcome Evil by Doing Good
  • Chapter 48. Running the Race
  • Chapter 49. Here We Go
  • Chapter 50. Standing Firm
  • Chapter 51. So Help Me God
  • Chapter 52. The Calm After the Storm
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The former vice president reflects warmly on the president whose followers were encouraged to hang him. Pence's calm during the Trump years has been a source of bemusement, especially during the administration's calamitous demise. In this bulky, oddly uncurious political memoir, Pence suggests the source of his composure is simple: frequent prayer and bottomless patience for politicking. After a relatively speedy recap of his personal and political history in Indiana--born-again Christian, conservative radio host, congressman, governor--he remembers greeting the prospect of serving under Trump with enthusiasm. He "was giving voice to the desperation and frustration caused by decades of government mismanagement," he writes. Recounting how the Trump-Pence ticket won the White House in 2016, he recalls Trump as a fundamentally hardworking president, albeit one who often shot from the hip. Yet Pence finds Trump's impulsivity an asset, setting contentious foreign leaders and Democrats off-balance. Soon they settled into good cop--bad cop roles; he was "the gentler voice," while "it was Trump's job to bring the thunder." Throughout, Pence rationalizes and forgives all sorts of thundering. Sniping at John McCain? McCain never really took the time to understand him! Revolving-door staffers? He's running government like a business! That phone call with Ukraine's president? Overblown! Downplaying the threat Covid-19 presented in early 2020? Evidence, somehow, of "the leadership that President Trump showed in the early, harrowing days of the pandemic." But for a second-in-command to such a disruptive figure, Pence dwells little on Trump's motivations, which makes the story's climax--Trump's 2020 election denials and the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection--impossible for him to reconcile. How could such a selfless patriot fall under the sway of bad lawyers and conspiracy theorists? God only knows. Chalk it up to Pence's forgiving nature. In the lengthy acknowledgments he thanks seemingly everybody he's known personally or politically; but one name's missing. Disingenuous when not willfully oblivious. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.