Trump Not Welcome ⢠Obamaâs Daily Headaches ⢠Bushâs Time of Crisis [View in your browser]( | [Update your preferences](newsletter=vf) [Vanity Fair Hive logo image]( Archives Extra: Bidenâs Battle and the Unbearable Weight of the Presidency Good morning and happy Presidentsâ Day. With Joe Biden weighing a second White House bid, the Hive is pulling from its archives to look back on the personal obstacles he and his predecessors faced both before and during their terms. Bidenâs life in particular has been marked by tragedy, as David Kamp chronicled in his 2017 [feature]( on the presidentâs book, Promise Me, Dad, which reveals how Bidenâs 2016 presidential ambitions were upended by the death of his 46-year-old son, Beau. Meanwhile, if youâre looking for a glimpse into the everyday challenges of the commander in chief, consider Michael Lewisâs [six-month ride-along]( with Barack Obama, who gave Lewis the skinny on the âbizarre emotional demandsâ of the job. âHe spends his day leaping over ravines between vastly different feelings,â Lewis wrote of Obama in his 2012 feature. âHow does anyone become used to this?â The extraordinary weight of the presidency was also felt acutely by George W. Bush, particularly in the wake of September 11, Christopher Buckley documented in his [juicy feature]( during the lead-up to the Iraq War. âWhat is he thinking behind those astonished eyes?â Buckley writes of Bush, who learned of the terrorist attack while sitting in on a reading to a group of elementary school students in Sarasota, Florida. âHe is president of the United States, the most powerful man on earth, but in this moment, sitting there surrounded by seven- and eight-year-olds, he looks alone.â While Bush and Obama retreated from public life with some degree of grace, the same could not be said for Donald Trump, who, as Kate Andersen Brower [divined]( in 2020, would not go on to be welcomed into the âso-called Presidents Club,â members of which have been known to lend an ear to one another in times of crisis. And in case youâre a history buff, dive into Sam Kashnerâs [lengthy item]( on the emotional turmoil behind The Death of a President, William Manchesterâs 1967 account of John F. Kennedyâs assassination, which Jackie Kennedy asked him to write just months after her husbandâs death. [Joe, Mourning]( By [David Kamp]( [In a cruel twist, Joe Bidenâs planned 2016 presidential campaign was upended by the death of its foremost booster, his 46-year-old son, Beau, from brain cancer. Will the former vice president make a run in 2020? With the publication of his book Promise Me, Dad, recalling that tragic period, Biden opens up to David Kamp about the emotionalâand politicalâchallenges he is facing]( [Read more button](
[Club Rules]( By [Kate Andersen Brower]( [When the commander in chief departs the White House, heâs typically welcomed into a close-knit brotherhood of former presidents. In an exclusive excerpt from her new book, Team of Five, Kate Andersen Brower reveals why Donald Trump will be left out of the worldâs most elite fraternity.]( [Read more button]( [Obamaâs Way]( By [Michael Lewis]( [To understand how air force navigator Tyler Stark ended up in a thornbush in the Libyan desert in March 2011, one must understand what itâs like to be president of the United Statesâand this president in particular. Hanging around Barack Obama for six months, in the White House, aboard Air Force One, and on the basketball court, Michael Lewis learns the reality of the Nobel Peace Prize winner who sent Stark into combat.]( [Read more button]( [War and Destiny]( By [Christopher Buckley]( [To understand how air force navigator Tyler Stark ended up in a thornbush in the Libyan desert in March 2011, one must understand what itâs like to be president of the United Statesâand this president in particular. Hanging around Barack Obama for six months, in the White House, aboard Air Force One, and on the basketball court, Michael Lewis learns the reality of the Nobel Peace Prize winner who sent Stark into combat.]( [Read more button]( [A Clash of Camelots]( By [Sam Kashner]( [Within months of JFKâs death, the presidentâs widow asked William Manchester to write the authorized account of the assassination. He felt he couldnât refuse her. Two years later, nearly broken by the task, Manchester found himself fighting a bitter, headline-making battle with Jackie and Bobby Kennedy over the finished book. Sam Kashner chronicles the toll Manchesterâs 1967 best-seller, The Death of a President, exactedâphysically, emotionally, and financiallyâbefore it all but disappeared.]( [Read more button]( Get on the list Subscribe to our Hollywood newsletter for your essential industry and awards-season news, every day. [Sign Up Now]( [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( [LinkedIn]( This e-mail was sent to you by The Hive. To ensure delivery to your inbox (not bulk or junk folders), please add our e-mail address, vanityfair@newsletter.vf.com, to your address book. View our [Privacy Policy]( [Unsubscribe](newsletter=vf) Sent from Condé Nast, 1 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007 Copyright © 2023 Condé Nast