Gaddis Smith reviewed the book for the journal Foreign Affairs and wrote that "These earnest, well-constructed memoirs depict a determined and informed politician who played a significant role as her husband's closest adviser".[7] In The Globe and Mail, Ruth Clements felt that "Rosalynn Carter emerges from these memoirs as a very likeable woman"[8] and Phil Gailey in The New York Times considered the account useful in understanding Jimmy Carter, calling it "intimate". Gailey continued to say that the book was "readable, lively and revealing" and was possibly the "best human account" of Carter's presidency.[9] A reviewer in The Boston Globe agreed, praising the book's intimacy and describing Rosalynn's story as "truly an American success story".[2]Commentary noted that the book had a "dreamy, cinematic quality" in parts because it described events in the present tense.[10]