Christine O’Donnell, who appeared on “Piers Morgan Tonight” last night to promote her new book, “Troublemaker: Let’s Do What It Takes to Make America Great Again,â€, yet walked off the set when Morgan asked her a question about marriage equality, was filmed reading from her book in studio, evidently for an audiobook version for her many followers who might not be able to read? (FYI: available at Audible.com)
READ: Tea Party Denounces Christine O’Donnell After She Walks Off Piers Morgan
“Troublemaker,â€Â which on Amazon received only 2 1/2 stars, “is about where O’Donnell comes from—the Philadelphia suburbs with five kids to a room—and what she weathered in the 2010 election. But the core of the book is a clear, straightforward discussion of an America that yearns to embrace freedom and opportunity through personal responsibility, and how it is hamstrung and stymied by excessive regulation, taxation, and the sanctimony of a “nanny state.†And Troublemaker will deliver an important, rousing message about what we do with the quiet anger in America today: where we can go, and how strong we can be, from here. Warning readers that challenging the status quo makes the political establishment push back, O’Donnell wants to build a movement that will continue to goad it,” according to a Time review posted at Amazon.
(Let’s just remember Christine O’Donnell’s own relationship with personal responsibility, shall we?)
Perhaps the best review on Amazon includes this line:
“If one opens this tome about two-thirds through, the pages form a wedge that could be useful as a temporary door stop or to level a table in an emergency. Other than that, you are on your own.”
The “most helpful” rated Amazon review states, “I never thought a book written so greatly could come to a person in a seance, around a cauldron, in the middle of the woods, whilst playing with the Ouji board. Myself being a white wizard found this book to be inspiring, joyful, truthful, and to the point.”
Another review: “It truly shows the incompetence of a typical Tea Party movement candidate,” while another calls her “the Samantha Stevens of teabaggery.”
And then there’s this one: “Oddly enough, in her vision of America, she talks about the need for personal responsibility, yet she takes no responsibility for being a failure. Oh, and God doesn’t get blamed either even though he’s the one who told her to run for Senate.”
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