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The Mueller Report Illustrated

The Obstruction Investigation

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A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

Written and designed by the staff of The Washington Post and illustrated by artist Jan Feindt, The Mueller Report Illustrated: The Obstruction Investigation brings to life the findings of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III in an engaging and illuminating presentation.
When it was released on April 18, 2019, Mueller's report laid out two major conclusions: that Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election had been "sweeping and systematic" and that the evidence did not establish that Trump or his campaign had conspired with the Kremlin. The special counsel left one significant question unanswered: whether the president broke the law by trying to block the probe.

However, Mueller unspooled a dramatic narrative of an angry and anxious president trying to control the criminal investigation, even after he knew he was under scrutiny. Deep inside the 448-page report is a fly-on-the-wall account of the inner workings of the White House, remarkable in detail and drama. With dialogue taken directly from the report, The Mueller Report Illustrated is a vivid, factually rigorous narrative of a crucial period in Trump's presidency that remains relevant to the turbulent events of today.
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    • Kirkus

      The Washington Post serves up a lively, graphic version of the foundational document in the current presidential impeachment process. Issued in April 2019, the so-called Mueller Report investigated Donald Trump's ties to Russia before, during, and after the 2016 campaign. Although its subject trumpeted that the report exonerated him, the Post team, headed by investigative political reporter Rosalind Helderman and augmented by Israeli graphic artist and illustrator Jan Feindt, observes at the start that the report made two things clear: It established that the Russian effort to influence the election was "sweeping and systematic" and left open the question of whether Trump committed a crime for trying to obstruct the investigation. This interference was well known long before Mueller set pen to paper, but Republican leaders in Congress swept it under the rug. Feindt has a straightforward editorial style of drawing that captures Trump's every barking snarl and pouting snit. While the storyline is eminently faithful to Mueller's more detailed documentation, the writers and artist bring drama to it by showing the many points of resistance within Trump's staff--Chris Christie deciding he would not act as a shill to try to swing James Comey into Trump's camp, deputy national security adviser K.T. McFarland's refusal to lie for Trump in exchange for an ambassadorial appointment, which, Reince Priebus feared, would "be seen as a quid pro quo," a term much in the news of late. In an analysis, Helderman and her associates observe that these aides and staffers restrained Trump, for they quickly determined that "if they ignored or delayed the president's most impetuous orders, his mood and attention would often shift." Of course, those staffers are now gone, and so are the restraints they imposed. The illustrated report closes, as did the original, with an admonition that has doubtless troubled Trump's sleep ever since: "While this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime...it also does not exonerate him." Readers seeking an overview of the Mueller Report that constantly cuts to the chase will find this just the ticket.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

    • Booklist

      Starred review from January 1, 2020
      Someone should have told Special Counsel Robert Mueller that his 448 page-report could have been in graphic form all along. While there is no doubt the actual report is full of details, nuances, and footnotes to tantalize impeachment nerds, it turns out that an illustrated version with speech bubbles and small blocks of text probably works just fine for everyone else. The editors explain in a preface that the book is drawn directly from episodes in the report. "Words within quotation marks reflect exact dialogue included in the report or comments made at public events or in reports or in media interviews." The illustrations, black-and-white touched with spots of gold, are based on photographs taken at the time. Both art and text focus on personalities; along with President Trump, the featured players include FBI director James Comey, presidential advisor Steve Bannon, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and, at center stage, White House Counsel Don McGahn, who pushed back or ignored several of Trump's orders. In fact, what comes across strongly is that one aspect of the president's staff's work was to save him from himself and his worst political impulses. A several-page epilogue chronicles what happened after the report was released. Concise and catchy, this is an essential buy for both adult and youth departments.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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