Kurt Eichenwald Quote

As I sat in the deli, I had no idea I was watching my mother transform; she was resolving to no longer stand helplessly on the sidelines and instead to fight to end the chaos. She had allowed my father to seize the role of overseer of my medical care, then hadn’t fought back when I insisted on finding my own doctor in Pennsylvania—all with disastrous results. If she hadn’t forced me into Northwestern, I would have been dead. Only her decisions had been correct; my father’s and mine had consistently been terrible. She knew taking control would mean fighting us both. She had never been an aggressive person and often allowed my father to dictate her life choices. No more.

Kurt Eichenwald

As I sat in the deli, I had no idea I was watching my mother transform; she was resolving to no longer stand helplessly on the sidelines and instead to fight to end the chaos. She had allowed my father to seize the role of overseer of my medical care, then hadn’t fought back when I insisted on finding my own doctor in Pennsylvania—all with disastrous results. If she hadn’t forced me into Northwestern, I would have been dead. Only her decisions had been correct; my father’s and mine had consistently been terrible. She knew taking control would mean fighting us both. She had never been an aggressive person and often allowed my father to dictate her life choices. No more.

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About Kurt Eichenwald

Kurt Alexander Eichenwald (born June 28, 1961) is an American journalist and a New York Times bestselling author of five books, one of which, The Informant (2000), was made into a motion picture in 2009. He was a senior writer and investigative reporter with The New York Times, Condé Nast's business magazine, Portfolio, and later was a contributing editor with Vanity Fair and a senior writer with Newsweek. Eichenwald had been employed by The New York Times since 1986 and primarily covered Wall Street and corporate topics such as insider trading, accounting scandals, and takeovers, but also wrote about a range of issues including terrorism, the Bill Clinton pardon controversy, federal health care policy, and sexual predators on the Internet.