Morrison, Patt. “Purely Human Moments and Capital’s Pomp.” Los Angeles Times, January 21, 1993, p. 1.
   “Mrs. Clinton’s Book Deal.” New York Times, editorial, December 22, 2000. “Mrs. Clinton’s Unwavering Words.” New York Times, editorial, September 6, 1995, p. 24.
   Nagourney, Adam. “Hillary Clinton Begins Pre-Campaign in a New Role for Her.” New York Times, July 8, 1999.
   New York Times, editorial, July 11, 1993.
   Norris, Michele L. “A Celebration That ‘Took on a Life of Its Own.’” Washington Post,
   January 17, 1993, p. 1.
   O’Connor, Colleen. “Prayers for the World: Marianne Williamson Writes About Making Amends.” Dallas Morning News, January 7, 1995, p. 1.
   Oliphant, Thomas. “The Witness Who Wasn’t.” Boston Globe, February 17, 1998.
   Pace, Eric. “Hugh Rodham Dies After Stroke; Father of Hillary Clinton Was 82.” New
   York Times, April 8, 1993.
   Priest, Dana. “Putting Health Care Under a Microscope: In Clinical Detail, Clinton Task Force Analyzes and Argues Its Way Toward a Reform Plan.” Washington Post, April 16, 1993, p. 1.
   ———. “White House Considers Requiring Individuals to Buy Health Insurance.” Washington Post, March 29, 1993, p. 6.
   Purdum, Todd. “Siblings Who Often Emerge in an Unflattering Spotlight.” New York Times, February 23, 2001.
   Quinn, Sally. “Beware of Washington.” Newsweek, December 28, 1992, p. 26.
   ———. “In Washington, That Letdown Feeling.” Washington Post, November 2, 1998.
   ———. “Making Capital Gains: Welcome to Washington, but Play by Our Rules.” Washington Post, November 15, 1992.
   Raines, Howell. “New Faces in Southern Politics: Women, Young and ‘Outsiders.’” New York Times, July 3, 1978.
   Rich, Frank. “David Brock’s Women.” Journal, New York Times, January 6, 1994.
   Richman, Phyllis C. “Eschewing the Fat with Hillary: A New Point of ‘Lite’ at the White House.” Washington Post, December 1, 1993.
   Richter, Paul. “White House Denies Secret Service Spat.” Los Angeles Times, March 30, 1993, p. 11.
   Richter, Paul, and Edwin Chen. “Clinton, Aides Hit the Road to Push Health Care Plan.” Los Angeles Times, September 24, 1993.
   Romano, Lois. “The Reliable Source.” Washington Post, January 20, 1993, p. 3.
   ———. Washington Post, December 23, 1993.
   ———. “The Win Blows in Little Rock: Dancing in the Streets for City’s Favorite Son.” Washington Post, November 6, 1996.
   Rosenbaum, David E. “A Republican Who Sees Himself as a Revolutionary on the Verge of Victory.” New York Times, July 24, 1994.
   Safire, William. “Blizzard of Lies.” New York Times, January 8, 1996, p. 27.
   ———. “The Hillary Problem.” New York Times, March 26, 1992, p. 23.
   Schmidt, Susan, and Tony Locy. “Travel Office Memo Draws Probers’ Ire; Ex-aide Contradicts Hillary Clinton on Firings.” Washington Post, January 5, 1996.
   Schmidt, Susan, Peter Baker, and Toni Locy. “Clinton Accused of Urging Aide to Lie: Starr Probes Whether President Told Woman to Deny Alleged Affair to Jones’ Lawyers.” Washington Post, January 21, 1998, p. 1.
   Schmidt, Susan, and Sharon LaFraniere. “Senators Hear 2 Stories on Foster Office Search: Officer, First Lady’s Aide Differ on File Removal.” Washington Post, July 27, 1995.
   Seper, Jerry. “Clinton Papers Lifted After Aide’s Suicide: Foster’s Office Was Secretly Searched Hours After His Body Was Found.” Washington Times, December 20, 1993.
   ———. “Reno Seeks a Change in Fiske’s Status.” Washington Times, July 2, 1994.
   Shales, Tom. “The Numb and the Restless.” Washington Post, July 21, 1988, p. 1.
   Sherrill, Martha. “The Education of Hillary Clinton.” Washington Post, January 11, 1993, p. B1.
   ———. “Eleanor Roosevelt, in Bronze: Hillary Clinton Joins in Benefit for N.Y. Statue.” Washington Post, February 22, 1993, p. 1.
   ———. “Growing Up in a Chicago Suburb: A Good Girl, Getting Better All the Time." Washington Post, January 11, 1993.
   ———. “Hillary Clinton’s Inner Politics: As the First Lady Grows Comfortable in Her Roles, She Is Looking Beyond Policy to a Moral Agenda.” Washington Post, May 6, 1993, p. 1.
   ———. “Mrs. Clinton’s Two Weeks Out of Time: The Vigil for Her Father, Taking a Toll Both Public and Private.” Washington Post, April 3, 1993, p. C1.
   ———. “The Retooling of the Political Wife: Her Final Test: How to Handle Scandal.” Washington Post, January 13, 1993, p. 1.
   ———. “The Rising Lawyer’s Detour to Arkansas: At Wellesley, She Found Her Calling; At Yale, She Met Her Future.” Washington Post, January 12, 1993.
   Skorneck, Carolyn. “Reno Rejects Dole Suggestion of Political Interference.” Associated Press, January 8, 1994.
   ———. “White House Decries ‘Cannibalism’ in Attacks on Clinton.” Associated Press, January 7, 1994.
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   Van Natta, Don, Jr. “White House’s All-Out Attack on Starr Is Paying Off, with His Help.” New York Times, March 2, 1998, p. 12.
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   Wall Street Journal, editorial, June 24, 1993.
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   Zehren, Charles V. “Whitewater Hearings on Tap.” Newsday, July 7, 1995.
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   ———. “Wynette Wants Clinton Apology.” USA Today, January 29, 1992, p. 2.
   Zwecker, Bill. “‘Hot’ Rumors Dog Clintons.” Chicago Sun-Times, February 19, 1993.
   Author Interviews
   Roger Altman
   Ellen Chesler
   Carl Anthony
   Greg Craig
   Dick Atkinson
   Lynn Cutler
   Don Baer
   Lanny Davis
   Woody Bassett
   Oscar Dowdy
   Nancy Bekavac
   Ernest Dumas
   Lloyd Bentsen
   Betsy Johnson Ebeling
   Richard Ben-Veniste
   Tom Ebeling
   Marcia Berry
   Peter Edelman
   Carol Biondi
   Sara Ehrman
   Frank Biondi
   Rahm Emanuel
   Diane Blair
   John Emerson
   Jim Blair
   Mark Fabiani
   Linda Bloodworth-Thomason
   Connie Fails
   Tom Boggs
   Barney Frank
   Bob Boorstin
   Mary Mel French
   Robert Borosage
  
					     					 			  Richard Friedman
   Erskine Bowles
   Andrew Friendly
   Nicole Boxer
   Kelly Crawford Friendley
   Bill Bradley
   Al From
   Max Brantley
   Mark Gearan
   Connie Bruck
   David Gergen
   Dale Bumpers
   Doris Kearns Goodwin
   James Carville
   Richard Goodwin
   Stan Greenberg
   Leon Panetta
   Jim Hart
   Mark Penn
   Ann Henry
   Ann Terry Pincus
   Jean Houston
   John Podesta
   Webb Hubbell
   David Pryor
   Harold Ickes
   Molly Raiser
   Mickey Kantor
   Robert Reich
   John Kerry
   Ann Richards
   Joe Klein
   Robert Rubin
   Neel Lattimore
   Deborah Sale
   Terry McAuliffe
   Donna Shalala
   John McCain
   Geoff Shields
   Mike McCurry
   Carly Simon
   Eileen McGann
   Wendy Smith
   Mack McLarty
   Richard Stearns
   Bob McNeely
   Ann Stock
   Brian McPartlin
   Robert Strauss
   Dick Morris
   William Styron
   Lissa Muscatine
   Robert Torricelli
   Dee Dee Myers
   Robert Treuhaft
   Roy Neel
   Melanne Verveer
   Bernard Nussbaum
   David Wilhelm
   Lawrence O’Donnell
   Betsey Wright
   Kevin O’Keefe
   Other
   Adams, Ruth. Commencement Speech, Wellesley College. May 31, 1969.
   Articles of Impeachment: As Delivered to the Senate by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry Hyde, January 8, 1999.
   Bernstein, Carl. Personal notes.
   Blair, Diane. Interviews conducted by Diane Blair for unpublished book. Copyright, the Diane Blair Trust.
   Bowles, Erskine. Testimony from Report of the Independent Counsel.
   Buchanan, Patrick. Speech, Republican National Convention, Houston, Texas. August 17, 1992.
   CBS This Morning. January 7, 1994.
   Christian Brothers Academy literature.
   Clinton, Bill. Inaugural Address. January 20, 1993.
   Clinton, Bill. Interview, The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. January 21, 1998.
   Clinton, Bill. Speech to the Nation. August 17, 1998.
   Clinton, Bill. State of the Union address. January 27, 1998.
   Clinton, Hillary. Interview, 60 Minutes.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton. Letter to Geoff Shields, provided by Geoff Shields.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Remarks, Liz Carpenter Lecture Series, University of Texas, Austin. April 7, 1993.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Remarks to the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, China. September 5, 1995.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Speech, Democratic National Convention, Chicago, Illinois. August 26–29, 1996.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Speech to the U.S. Senate. October 10, 2002.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Statement of Hillary Clinton.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Commencement Speech, Wellesley College. May 31, 1969.
   Clinton, Hillary Rodham. Wellesley College senior thesis.
   Fiske Report.
   Graham, Rev. Billy. Invocation, Presidential Inauguration. January 20, 1993.
   King, Martin Luther, Jr., Speech, “Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution,” in Sheehy, Hillary’s Choice (New York: Ballantine, 1999), p. 36.
   Mission Statement, Children’s Defense Fund Action Counsel.
   NBC Nightly News. November 11, 1993.
   The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. September 23, 1996.
   Reich, Robert. Interview, PBS Frontline.
   Report of the Independent Counsel.
   This Week. January 25, 1999.
   Today. January 27, 1998.
   The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. 1988.
   United Methodist News Service. September 16, 1992.
   White House transcript. January 26, 1998.
   Web Sites
   Marianne Williamson Web site.
   www.hillaryclinton.com.
   www.jeanhouston.org.
   www.riponsociety.org/history.htm.
   www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/First_Woman_Both_Houses.htm.
   http://icreport.loc.gov/icreport/
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   Knopf vice president and senior editor Jonathan Segal, an incomparable editor in my view, has lent a guiding hand and been a patient teacher since I began work on this book seven years ago. He meticulously read draft after draft of its various sections, commenting on them and gently moving me towards my destination, and edging me onto the narrative path I sought. Once I was on it, he cleared away the obstacles I put in my own way (no matter how attached I was to some of them) and enabled me to better understand the character of my subject and put her story in its present context. He also became a cherished friend.
   Four remarkable young assistants helped me with the research and every other aspect of the project. This book could not have been written without them and without the good humor that accompanied their diligence, dedication, and skill. I am indebted to them: Stacy Atlas Kerzner, Amanda Ely, Kristina Goetz, and Carmen Johnson.
   At Knopf, I found a group of people who care about books in a way that to me feels unique: dedicated to maintaining the underlying values of a great tradition, and committed to cherished ideals and principles. As I discovered, part of the tradition is familial at Knopf (or, as Hillary might say, it takes a village), and begins with chairman and editor in chief Sonny Mehta, whose extraordinary faith in this project I am deeply grateful for.
   I owe special thanks to several people at Knopf: Lydia Buechler, the copy chief, who shepherded the book through the copyediting and proofreading with great care and enthusiasm, and never a word of complaint through seemingly endless hours of work; Anke Steinecke, vice president and associate counsel, for her diligence and rare legal skill that helped strengthen the manuscript; Paul Bogaards and his promotion staff; Nina Bourne, a friend of many, many years who I was never lucky enough to work with until now; Kyle McCarthy, who as Jon Segal’s assistant became an integral participant; Carol Shookhoff, who typed the manuscript and made helpful suggestions along the way; Fred Chase, a copyeditor whose skills and great care I came to hold in awe; Carol Carson, Knopf’s art director; Avery Flück, the production manager; Virginia Tan, the book’s designer; and Carol Janeway, the wonderful foreign rights director.
   My agent, Owen Laster, of William Morris, is likewise rooted in the best traditions of his craft; he recently retired, but leaves a standard that is a tribute to his geniality and consummate professionalism.
   Special thanks to Louis Plummer, Doug Hill, and Kate Griffin of PhotoAssist; and Dr. John Barrie for his insight and help.
   I could not have completed this book without the help and isolation of Yaddo, a remarkable institution that gives writers and artists a contemplative opportunity to proceed and succeed. I was introduced to Yaddo by my friend Suzy Crile. There, I made another great friend for life, Elena Richardson, Yaddo’s president. I cannot give enough thanks to Candace Wait, her husband, Charles, and Kathy Clarke, all of whom are dedicated to Yaddo’s mission.
   For thirty-five years now Bob Woodward and I have conducted an ongoing dialogue about our work and our lives—a source of great satisfaction.
   I owe special thanks to my sons, Max and Jacob Bernstein, who had reached the age during my work on this book where their encouragement and criticism were both helpful and loving at the same time; special thanks also go to Thea Stone. My thanks also to my sisters, Mary Bernstein Hunter and Laura Bernst 
					     					 			ein Ikonen. My parents, Al and Sylvia Bernstein, both died before the book was finished, but their ideals inform all that I believe in. My mother, through the eight years of the Clinton presidency, worked as a volunteer in a group of retired women who sorted and helped answer Hillary’s routine mail; she is not the source of a single word in this book. I miss her and my dad more than words can say.
   I want to express my love and constant gratitude to Christine Kuehbeck, my wife, at whom I wonder every day. She is the person to whom I look for wisdom I find nowhere else; that has been especially true in every aspect of this book. Christine read these pages with a woman’s eye. She raised questions and posed notions that would never have occurred to me—as she always does. She brings unusual insight and perception to all the subjects we endlessly discuss, and brings those qualities—and her unabashed enthusiasm—to the whole of our lives together.
   A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR
   Carl Bernstein, with Bob Woodward, shared a Pulitzer Prize for their coverage of Watergate for the Washington Post. He is the author, with Woodward, of All the President’s Men and The Final Days, and, with Marco Politi, of His Holiness: John Paul II and the History of Our Time. He is also the author of Loyalties, a memoir about his parents during McCarthy-era Washington. He has written for Vanity Fair (he is also a contributing editor), Time, USA Today, Rolling Stone, and The New Republic. He was a Washington bureau chief and correspondent for ABC News. He lives with his wife, Christine, in New York.
   *1Ebeling is Betsy’s married name. Her maiden name was Johnson.
   Return to text.
   *2How severely Hugh Rodham beat his children has never been directly addressed publicly by Hillary, her brothers, or her mother.