Rave
Martha Anne Toll,
NPR
A memoir about Nina Totenberg, a jaunt through her captivating life and career, nose for the jugular, and forthrightness about her joys and sorrows. The book opens a window into the history of professional women in the workplace, as well as the trajectory of the Supreme Court over the last 50 years. Above all, Totenberg's book is about the abiding importance of friendship.
Positive
Susan Dominus,
New York Times Book Review
The book, a loosely organized account of her own life, and the role of Ginsburg (among other friends) in it, has a genial, likable tone. Totenberg’s stories are lively but never go on too long; she appears to reflexively turn the reader’s attention to the generosity or small kindnesses of others. She writes, without pretension or self-congratulation, about moments of journalistic triumph of which she has every right to be proud. She is also unfailingly discreet, a quality that the reader must concede reflects well on her as a friend. It serves her less well as the author of a memoir whose most central character, outside of Totenberg herself, is one of the most influential, fascinating and, to some, frustrating women of the last century.
Rave
Curt Shleier,
Star Tribune
Dinners With Ruth is really three excellent books: a memoir of Nina Totenberg's relatively blessed life; an anecdotal account of Ruth Bader Ginsburg's; and, finally, a paean to the bond of friendship, which, like fine wine, gets better with age. It is so engagingly written, so captivating, it's difficult not to feel at least a little jealous of Totenberg, who seems to have it all.
Rave
Jennifer Bort Yacovissi,
The Washington Independent Review of Books
For anyone who has seen the heartwarming documentary RBG (and if you haven’t, you really need to), some of Totenberg’s anecdotes will be familiar, but that’s no surprise given their long-running friendship. Add to that, Totenberg was one of Ginsburg’s most frequent interviewers over the years as the tiny-but-fierce Supreme Court justice grew into her alter ego, that icon of girl power, the Notorious RBG.
Rave
Katie Noah Gibson,
Shelf Awareness
Thoughtful.
Rave
Kathleen McBroom,
Booklist
Engrossing and engaging.
Positive
Edith G. Tolchin,
New York Journal of Books
Totenberg created a great work, sharing her relationships across all political parties, enhanced by her nearly 50-year loving bond with RBG..
Pan
G.S. Hans,
Balls and Strikes
A book written in the cadence of your airplane row mate who won’t stop broadcasting their meandering life story.
Rave
Publishers Weekly
In this luminous debut, NPR legal correspondent Totenberg delivers a riveting account of her 50-year friendship with Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Positive
Kirkus
An affectionate, revealing portrait of an important figure in American history..