Michiko Kakutani published a review in
The New York Times in which she stated: "For the most part, however, the White House portions of this book feel carefully prepared and vetted: Mrs. Bush lays out a predictable defense of her husband’s decision to invade Iraq and his decision not to visit New Orleans in the immediate aftermath of Katrina, and she offers only the blandest portraits of administration figures like
Dick Cheney,
Donald H. Rumsfeld and
Karl Rove. In these chapters there is no daylight between Laura Bush and her highly groomed role as first lady."
Melissa Benn wrote a review in
The Guardian and noted: "
Spoken from the Heart perfectly fits the personal-is-political template. There is a lot of detail of designer dresses worn, official meals enjoyed, furniture and wallpaper restored, tours conducted and, of course, important political people encountered.
Tony and
Cherie are particular favourites, as is
Nicolas Sarkozy, of all people.
Vladimir Putin is given the occasional dressing down on the importance of democracy.
Barack Obama is chided for his personal attacks on George during the 2008 campaign. Dick Cheney, Karl Rove and
"Condi" Rice are all portrayed as utterly delightful."
Entertainment Weekly published a review by Tina Jordan, who wrote: "Anyone who wants to know what makes Laura Bush tick will come away disappointed." Jordan commented as well that Bush "seems almost a shadowy spectator in her own memoir", but Jordan praised the "sweetness and poignancy" of the first few sections of the book covering Bush's childhood and marriage.
Elaine Showalter published a review in
The Daily Telegraph, in which she noted "this is a calculated and highly controlled autobiography, spoken from the heart, maybe, but more accurately titled 'Written from the Head'."
Washington Post published a review by
Ruth Marcus, who stated: "Laura Bush's autobiography, 'Spoken From the Heart,' begins promisingly enough for anyone hoping to penetrate that [her] surface. ==See also==