The latest and perhaps juiciest Trump tell-all to land this year” —The New York Times
"Due to land in October like a late tropical storm, and could affect the midterm elections" —New York Magazine
"..Blunt, funny and authentic. She is all the things women are not supposed to be. And yet you like her — not in spite of her rule-breaking but for it. Perhaps more important, when you read her story, you believe her." —Washington Post
"Reading Daniels' story in her own words, you find yourself charmed by her wit and her stark self-awareness, all of which draws you further into the book. I found myself turning page after page, genuinely intrigued." —CNN
“What’s so refreshing about Full Disclosure is its free-wheeling candor… The Daniels of Full Disclosure is profane and funny. She is also gleefully, one might even say gloriously, free of shame.” —New York Times Book Review
“A jaunty, foulmouthed treatment of her life… Above all, she is out to prove that she's much more than ‘two to three minutes’ with Donald Trump.” —NPR
“Ranks with the best in a surprisingly moving genre” —Politico
“Personable, often profanely funny” —Publishers Weekly
“Make no mistake, Full Disclosure is a story for our times… Daniels is one person with an unvarnished narrative.” —The Guardian
10/08/2018
Adult film actress Stormy Daniels offers details about her brief 2006 affair with Donald Trump, but that's not the focus of this conversational, wide-ranging, and forthright account of her life. A bright kid from Louisiana who wanted to be a writer and loved horses, Daniels grew up in a dysfunctional rat- and cockroach-infested house, was sexually abused at age nine by a friend's neighbor, excelled in school, had relationships with various boys (the details of which she candidly describes), and enjoyed horseback riding. She started stripping at 17—"and still graduated with honors as editor of the high school paper"—eventually making her way to Los Angeles, where she became an award-winning adult film actress, writer, and director, a line of work that would eventually put her in the path of then "goofy reality TV star" Donald Trump and, more important to this narrative, her now-ex-husbands, one of whom is the father of her daughter. Readers looking for a takedown of Donald Trump or a sordid take on life in the adult film industry should look elsewhere, but those who consider her an avatar of the resistance will enjoy this personable, often profanely funny, and forthcoming memoir. (Oct.)
2018-10-05
A lively, candid memoir from person-in-the-news Daniels.
The author is a household name for just one reason, as she allows—adding, though, that "my life is a lot more interesting than an encounter with Donald Trump." So it is, and not without considerable effort on her part. Daniels—not her real name, but one, she points out, that she owns, unlike the majority of porn stars—grew up on the wrong side of town, the product of a broken home with few prospects, but she is just as clearly a person of real intelligence and considerable business know-how. Those attributes were not the reason that Trump called her on a fateful night more than a decade ago, but she put them to work, so much so that in some preliminary conversation, he proclaimed—by her account, his talk is blustery and insistent—that "our businesses are kind of a lot alike, but different." The talk led to what "may have been the least impressive sex I'd ever had, but clearly, he didn't share that opinion." The details are deeply unpleasant, but Daniels adds nuance to the record: She doesn't find it creepy that Trump likened her to his daughter, and she reckons that as a reality show host, he had a few points in his favor even if he failed to deliver on a promise to get her on The Apprentice. The author's 15 minutes arrived a dozen years later, when she was exposed as the recipient of campaign hush money. Her account of succeeding events is fast-paced and full of sharp asides pointing to the general sleaziness of most of the players and the ugliness of politics, especially the Trumpian kind, which makes the porn industry look squeaky-clean by comparison.
Daniels emerges as a force to be reckoned with—and not someone to cross. Of interest to politics junkies but with plenty of lessons on taking charge of one's own life.