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All products are independently selected by our editors. If you buy something, we may earn an affiliate commission. It was a self-seal bubble mailer in standard-issue manila sent via messenger from a major publishing house, containing a single copy of the finished version of my first book, Chasing Hillary: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns and One Intact Glass Ceiling.
It felt like some cosmic life realignment that the finished edition of my memoir about covering Hillary Clinton for The New York Times , arrived during this mini-fiasco called new motherhood. I held my baby in my arms, the envelope taunting me from the floor, where it would remain unopened for the next several hours.
Instead, my son and I both wailed. I could see the pencil scrawls in my Big Chief notebook published and bound, perched on a shelf at the B. I thought if I worked hard enough and wrote every day, it would happen for me. English teacher whose primary reading material was the J. Crew catalogue. In , when I was 17, one of the teachers at the middle-school school where my mom worked took me to hear Hillary promote her first book, It Takes a Village. I was entranced by what she had to say.
I lived on a stash of savings from working in a snow cone stand in Austin. When that ran out, I took temp jobs all over town, at insurance offices and nonprofits, mostly. My writing submissions were either rejected or ignored; things got so bad that I actually contemplated law school. After months with no job offers, my sister met a New York Times political reporter through a mutual friend and this reporter generously agreed to have coffee with me.
The reporter never showed. That was my foot-in-the-door. The reporter who never showed is now my colleague. In , when I was 34, then Times executive editor Jill Abramson plucked me out of relative obscurity covering media companies and put me on the Hillary beat ahead of the coming presidential election.