In “Young Man in a Hurry,” Gavin Newsom traces how a dyslexic kid bouncing between hardship and privilege became California’s governor—and why the state’s contradictions shaped his politics. He moves from traumatic childhood custody exchanges and a family orbit that weirdly intersects with the Getty dynasty, to building PlumpJack and discovering the pull of public life. The memoir’s heartbeat is California itself: the dream factory with an “original sin” of extraction and violence, now facing drought, wildfire, and political extremism—yet still reinventing through a rising green economy.
Newsom revisits defining moments (same-sex marriage in San Francisco, homelessness reforms, climate action) alongside messy personal reckonings that forced him to grow up in public. If you like leadership stories with real consequences—and a state-sized backdrop—this one hits hard.
