'Sisters First'
“It reminds all of us, that people with public profiles are human beings too,” said Mark Dybal while introducing Barbara Bush and her sister Jenna Bush Hager at a book party in their honor for Sisters First: Stories from Our Wild and Wonderful Life at The Jefferson Hotel co-hosted by Mark, Connie Milstein, Tammy Haddad and Anita McBride. “This is what we call Washington 60 Minutes,” said Haddad who took over the mic. “It’s such a great book because it’s so uplifting, it makes me jealous that I don’t have a sister.”
Book synopsis: “In this funny and heartfelt memoir, the twin daughters of President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush offer their perspective on growing up in the public eye. Hager (a correspondent for NBC’s Today Show) and Bush (CEO and founder of Global Health Corps) describe their early childhood in Midland, Tex.; attending public high school while living in Austin’s governor’s mansion; and coming of age in the White House under the close scrutiny of the public, the press, and the Secret Service.
Some of the anecdotes are hilarious, as when then–Vice President George H.W. Bush (known here as “Gampy”) set out on a nighttime search for his young granddaughter’s misplaced stuffed animal, with a band of Secret Service agents trailing with flashlights, or when prankster Jenna’s water broke at her baby shower (even her husband didn’t believe it because the sisters had fibbed in the past). There are many loving reminiscences of the sisters’ close relationship and of the bond they share with their parents, advice and guidance from their grandparents (with some witty one-liners from grandmother Barbara “The Enforcer” Bush, who said to her son, “I don’t care if you are the president of the United States, take your feet off my coffee table”), as well as sober reflections on the war in Iraq, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and the tough and sometimes unpopular decisions the authors’ father made while in office. Readers will be entertained by this charming, wild, and wonderful pair of life stories.” Publishers Weekly