Threaded throughout is Biden’s agonized vacillation over a 2016 presidential run, complete with encomiums to his fitness for the presidency and an outline of the platform he would have run on had he not decided against it. Biden emerges as a statesman both steely-eyed (“I don’t think you have a soul,” he tells Vladimir Putin) and dependable (“ ‘Joe,’ said the new prime minister of Iraq, ‘I need your help’ ”) while he expresses sympathy for ordinary folks he even gives a policeman’s widow his private phone number to call when she feels sad. Biden tells this tragic story with genuine pathos, but in between the family gatherings and hospital vigils, he spotlights his central role in coping with public crises, including Russia’s incursion into Ukraine, ISIS’s rise, and domestic flare-ups of racial violence. Biden ( Promises to Keep) begins in late 2014, when his son Beau fought a harrowing battle with brain cancer through deepening disability, fleeting rallies, and experimental treatments. America’s 47th vice president revisits his son Beaus’s 2015 death from cancer while burnishing his own political capital in this heartfelt but not uncalculated memoir.
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