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Michelle Obama dan Perjuangannya untuk Hamil Lewat Program Bayi Tabung


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The first copies of my book have arrived! It’s a little surreal to hold the finished product in my hands. November 13th is almost here—pre-order your copy today at the link in my bio. #IAmBecoming

A post shared by Michelle Obama (@michelleobama) on Oct 18, 2018 at 2:23pm PDT


Washington (CNN) Former first lady Michelle Obama wrote that she was unable to put on a happy face and smile during President Donald Trump's inauguration in her new book, according to ABC News.

"Someone from Barack's administration might have said that the optics there were bad, that what the public saw didn't reflect the President's reality or ideals, but in this case, maybe it did," Obama said in audio of the book. "Realizing it, I made my own optic adjustment. I stopped even trying to smile."

In its interview with Obama, ABC News further quoted from her book, where the former first lady described her reaction to Trump's defeat of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in stark terms.

"I will always wonder about what led so many, women in particular, to reject an exceptionally qualified female candidate and instead choose a misogynist as their president," Obama wrote.

The Washington Post previously noted that Obama wrote she would "never forgive" Trump for promoting the false "birther" conspiracy about President Barack Obama.

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Former first ladies Julia Grant and Michelle Obama. (Photos by Matthew Brady/Brady-Handy Photograph Collection/Library of Congress; Matt McClain/The Washington Post) (Matthew Brady; Matt McClain/Matthew Brady/Brady-Handy Photograph Collection/Library of Congress; Matt McClain/The Washington Post)

When former first lady Julia Grant finished her memoir in 1899, with the help of one Mark Twain, she couldn’t find a publisher for it.

“My book, on which I have built so many castles, is by the critics pronounced too near, too close to the private life of [her husband], and I thought this was just what was wanted. You can well imagine my great disappointment and sorrow,” the widow of Ulysses S. Grant wrote in a letter to a friend.

Times, to put it mildly, have changed.

On Tuesday, former first lady Michelle Obama kicks off the release of her new memoir “Becoming” with a sold-out arena book tour featuring Oprah Winfrey and Beyoncé. She and her husband, Barack Obama, commanded a joint book deal reportedly worth more than $65 million.

But according to presidential historian Craig Fehrman, every first lady memoir has been a bestseller — many even outsold their husbands’ books.

[For eight years, Michelle Obama watched every word. In her memoir, she’s done with that.]

After Grant’s failed effort (which was finally released in 1975), Helen Taft became the first first lady to publish a memoir, “Recollections of Full Years,” in 1914. The New York Sun described it as “bright, witty, delightfully entertaining reminiscences,” in a three-sentence review.

[Why Melania Trump, Michelle Obama and Hillary Clinton attended Barbara Bush’s funeral]

Two decades later, Edith Wilson’s memoir got a longer review, but was derided for its focus on the former first lady’s clothing and social calendar. For the historian curious about the rumors she had secretly become the “first woman president” after Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke, one would find only “meager pickings,” one reviewer wrote.

Feminist icon Eleanor Roosevelt wrote not one but four memoirs, spanning from the beginning of her husband Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency to the year before her death in 1962. In contrast to Grant and Wilson, Roosevelt’s autobiographies dealt almost entirely with world affairs and her personal life hardly at all.

Nearly every evening of Lyndon B. Johnson’s presidency, first lady Lady Bird Johnson dictated an account of the day into a tape recorder. By 1969, she’d amassed a nearly two-million word transcript, which she then culled into a memoir.

“It’s like cutting one of your darlings,” she told The Washington Post in 1970. The final 300,000-word edit was well-received, and outsold her husband’s “flat” memoir published a few years later.

With the exception of Pat Nixon, every first lady since has published a memoir. Betty Ford and Rosalynn Carter both outsold their husbands, according to Fehrman.

Former first lady Barbara Bush, right, playfully strains to hear a reporter's question while posing with other former first ladies in 1994. From left are; Lady Bird Johnson, Betty Ford and Nancy Reagan. (Denis Paquin/AP)

But none of these books, whether they be focused on world affairs or domestic life, prepared readers for the release of first lady Nancy Reagan’s 1989 memoir “My Turn” — nicknamed “My Burn” for its harsh treatment of Ronald Reagan’s staff — and just about everyone with whom Nancy Reagan came into contact.

The Washington Post’s Sally Quinn said in a scathing review: “I read her book in one weekend and by the time I finished it Sunday night my shoulders and neck were practically in spasm. This is a very angry person.”

She went on: “She is furious with [former chief of staff and Treasury secretary] Don Regan. She is also mad at [former Secretary of State] Al Haig, Jimmy Carter, Jerry Ford, John Sears, Mike Deaver, Ed Meese, David Stockman, Bill Safire, Raisa Gorbachev, Stu Spencer, Nelson Rockefeller, Barry Goldwater, Joan Didion, me (I was looking for astrologer Joan Quigley in the index, I swear!), my husband [Post executive editor Ben Bradlee], her husband, her stepfather, Fritz Mondale, Geraldine Ferraro, John Poindexter, Ollie North, George Bush, the doctors on television, the press, her stepchildren Maureen and Michael and her daughter Patti. I'm sure I left some people out, but you get the point.”

The bad vibes didn’t stop, and perhaps propelled, sales. “My Turn” spent more than three months on the New York Times bestsellers list.

Obama is now poised to occupy that same spot on that list alongside other first ladies, though Reagan differed in one pointed way — she skipped the book tour.

Read more Retropolis:

“How could you?” The day Jackie Kennedy became Jackie Onassis

‘You were the reason:’ Barbara and George Bush’s epic love story hailed at her funeral

‘I’m no lady. I’m a member of Congress’: The first women who roared into the House


Former first lady Michelle Obama opens up with ABC's Robin Roberts on her infertility, relationship with her husband and her time in the White House.

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