Mark Singer has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1974. He is the author of Funny Money and Somewhere in America. He lives in New York City.
A lot of laughs ... A viciously entertaining demolition of the
branding savant with the peach pompadour who was to become the
Republican party nominee for the most powerful elected office in
the world -- Hari Kunzru * Guardian *
If you're a Trumpwatcher, this book will fascinate you * Evening
Standard *
Scathing, hilarious, cannily prescient ... Singer is excellent on
both the absurdity and menace of his subject -- Toby Lichtig *
Times Literary Supplement *
A classic of the genre * Vice *
Hilariously scathing * Observer *
Short but sweet ... An amusing but also terrifying portrayal of a
narcissist, with only a fleeting grasp of reality, who could soon
be the leader of the free world -- Rachel Sylvester * The Times
*
Trump & Me offers clearer insight into the mind of the presumptive
Republican nominee than any of the detailed biographies written
over the years ... Very funny ... Singer is excellent at describing
the disturbing strangeness of Trump's existence, and the
precariousness of his assets -- Stephen Robinson * Telegraph *
The best, most insightful, and funniest portrait of Trump -- David
Remnick, editor of The New Yorker
The measure of Donald Trump. Never equalled -- Lawrence Wright
Brilliant . . . amazingly relevant now -- James Fallows
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