I've commented on it before. Some bits:
- US has 574 Indian/Native American nations.
- Jared Kushner comes off as helpful and capable in this book, unlike other recent books where he and his young crew are mocked.
- Seema Verma is mentioned favorably.
- Birx doesn't come across as very flexible--she's focused on data, and keeps referring to the UP/CHop model, always emphasizing asymptomatic spreading. I don't know whether there any consensus has developed over the issue.
- She's down on CDC and portrays Redfield, the CDC head, as unable to move his bureaucracy in the directions she believes it should have gone, though he's one of the group of doctors (Fauci, Hahn, Redfield, and Birx who agreed to hang together). She thinks CDC should have people in the field with the state health departments (I didn't read her extensive set of recommendations at the end of the book).n
- She's no writer, so I did a lot of skimming in the last half.
- She has an extensive list of recommendations, which I didn't study. Now have Scott Gottlieb's book on the pandemic which seems also to look to the future.