Freedom
Memoirs 1954 – 2021
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4.3 • 3 Ratings
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- $28.99
Publisher Description
The New York Times and USA Today bestseller
For sixteen years, Angela Merkel was Chancellor of Germany and at the forefront of European and international politics. In her memoir, she looks back on her life in two German states—East Germany until 1990, and reunified Germany thereafter. How did she, coming from the East, rise to the top of the Christian Democratic Union to become the first woman to hold the office of chancellor? And how did she then become one of the most powerful heads of government in the Western world? What guided her?
In Freedom, Angela Merkel recounts daily life in the chancellor’s office as well as the dramatic days and nights when she made far-reaching decisions in Berlin, Brussels, and beyond. She traces the long lines of change in international cooperation and reveals the pressure politicians face when seeking solutions to complex problems in a globalized world. Here, she takes us behind the scenes of international politics, demonstrating both the importance of personal conversations and, crucially, their limits.
Reflecting on politics in a time of increasing confrontation and division, Angela Merkel’s memoir offers a unique insight into the inner workings of power—and is a determined and timely plea for freedom.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
With her legacy in question, former German Chancellor Angela Merkel sets the record straight not just about her policy decisions but her beliefs in this striking memoir. After living and working on the Soviet side of the Berlin Wall and joining the unification team that formed the country’s current government, she has a fascinating perspective on European politics well beyond her 16 years as Germany’s leader. She deftly provides plenty of detail about governmental inner workings without becoming bogged down in minutiae. The big-ticket items—dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump, plus her in-office stances on Ukraine’s NATO status and immigration—don’t disappoint, but there’s much more to Merkel’s life. The former Minister for Women and Youth’s complicated relationship with feminism could fill another book. Freedom manages to be a noteworthy historical account of 21st-century politics and an intriguing account of one woman’s remarkable life.