After just 107 days of the election campaign and a burning defeat against Donald Trump, Kamala Harris tells about his race to the White House in a Memoir announced as a load of political revelations and background.
Your code name in the secret services is Pioneer.
You are the first woman in history to be elected vice -president of the United States.
On July 21, 2024, your running partner, Joe Biden, announces that it will not continue.
The presidential elections will be held on November 5, 2024.
You have 107 days.
One hundred to six days. The presidential campaign of Kamala Harris lasted so much, yet so much is enough to write to us on a book. 107 Daysto be released on September 23 for Simon & Schuster, promises to tell everything (or almost) of that rapid political parable, which began between a thousand hopes and ended before even the voters finished learning the slogan. A sober, dry, almost chronicles title, as if to say: it will not have been long, but at least it is documented.
In the video with which Harris announced the release of the Memoir, the former vice -president talks about “107 days traveling to the country, fighting for our future – the shortest presidential campaign in modern history”. An affirmation that, called by anyone else, would sound like an embarrassed confession. Instead, she presents her with pride, ready to transform a marathon for three months into a fundamental chapter of American history. Or at least in a best-seller.
The contents of the book? Of course top secret. The publisher ensures “surprising revelations” and “unmissable background”, but did not want to confirm if Harris will face, for example, the great question that dominated last summer: was Joe Biden really able to continue? The silence in this regard is eloquent, but there will be time to find out how much Candore contains this Memoir.
Recall that Harris’s candidacy suddenly was born, after Biden’s shock retreat following a disastrous debate. He could have become the first woman – and the first black woman – to enter the White House. Instead, the defeat, clear, at the hands of Donald Trump arrived. And while other former candidates take a long holiday, Harris has decided to tidy up thoughts, reread them and send them to print.
Meanwhile, he has already made it known that he will not run for the office of California governor in 2026. A gesture of prudence, or perhaps the first move towards a new candidacy in 2028? The doubt remains, but in the meantime the Memoir is ready. Because if the story cannot do it, you can always write it.



