Butler The untold story of the near assassination of Donald Trump and the fight for America's heartland

Salena Zito

Book - 2025

"From the acclaimed journalist standing only a few feet away from the stage when the gunshots began is this gripping first-hand account of the near assassination of Donald Trump - and the inside story of Trump's heartland-fueled victory."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Personal narratives
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Center Street 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Salena Zito (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 242 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781546009146
  • Introduction: They Shoot Presidents in Butler
  • Chapter 1. One Inch Away
  • Chapter 2. Middle of Somewhere, Butler, Pennsylvania
  • Chapter 3. The Hand of God
  • Chapter 4. Shattered: The First Twenty-Four Hours in Pennsylvania
  • Chapter 5. A Front Row Seat
  • Chapter 6. "Now the Fun Begins"
  • Chapter 7. The Return
  • Chapter 8. The Son of Appalachia
  • Chapter 9. There Is No There There
  • Chapter 10. "As I Was Saying"
  • Chapter 11. "There Will Never Be Another One Like Him"
  • Chapter 12. The Reckoning
  • Afterword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Zito (The Great Revolt) offers a vivid firsthand account of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump at his Butler, Pa., rally and uses the experience to delve into the political importance of western Pennsylvania. Zito describes the shooting from her perspective "a mere few feet away" from Trump: the anticipatory atmosphere--the "happy" crowd with "newly purchased Trump flags, hats, sipping cups"--shifts dramatically as she's "shoved to the ground" after hearing gunshots. In addition to relaying her multiple phone calls with Trump the next day, when the two discussed "divine intervention... and Trump's purpose," Zito follows the election to its conclusion, occasionally offering some local insights such as how Harris's campaign blundered by holding "tightly controlled" invite-only rallies in Pennsylvania. However, her focus on Butler residents becomes more tenuous as she moves on to national events, and when she veers into detailed accounts of her schmoozy, admiration-filled interactions with Trump, who calls her "my beautiful Salena." Zito, who has multigenerational ties to western Pennsylvania, argues that reporters from New York and Washington, D.C., suffer from a "lack of rootedness" that weakens their coverage of places like Butler, yet her analysis of what caused these communities' rightward shift (globalization, opioids, inflation) doesn't go beyond what others have written. While well observed and knowledgeable, this pointed plea for a return to local reporting lacks fresh political insights. (July)

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