- Blistering new biography studies Barack Obama's relationships with well-educated ex-girlfriends including Genevieve Cook and Alexandra McNear
- President makes only fleeting references to former partners in his memoirs
- Book by Pulitzer-winning journalist David Marannis paints unflattering picture of Obama's drive to be seen as a pioneering race warrior
- Republican opponents are picking over inconsistencies between the Marannis book and Obama's own memoirs
By Tom Leonard In New York
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When Genevieve Cook first met Barack Obama in the kitchen of a mutual friendâs New York flat, he was wearing jeans, a T-shirt and a dark leather jacket.
It was 1983, and she was impressed when this cool, self-assured young man could tell immediately she was Australian.
In those days most Americans, even supposedly cosmopolitan New Yorkers, couldnât tell a Cockney from a Kiwi.

Romance: Genevieve Cook wasn't the first white girlfriend in Barack Obama's life, nor the last
But Obama had met many Aussies while living in Indonesia as a young boy with his mother and stepfather, and it turned out he and Cook â" the daughter of a prominent diplomat â" had lived in the country at the same time.
As the night wore on, they sat close together on an orange beanbag in the hall while Cook swigged Baileys Irish Cream straight from the bottle.
They were amazed at how much they had in common: both were children of divorced parents, both had lived all over the world and had never felt truly at home anywhere.
They exchanged phone numbers and the self-assured Obama didnât waste time. Within days, he was cooking her dinner at his apartment.
âThen we went and talked in his bedroom,â Cook recalled. âAnd then I spent the night with him.
âIt all felt very inevitable.â
The U.S. president and his First Lady sometimes seem so well-suited to each other that itâs hard to imagine there ever ha ving been any woman in his life other than the formidable Michelle, whom he met while working for a Chicago law firm in 1989.
Obama has reinforced this notion by making only fleeting mention of ex-girlfriends in his carefully calibrated memoirs, Dreams From My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance.

'Lithe and mysterious': Obama developed a serious crush on fellow student Alexandra McNear while at Occidental College in Los Angeles
He gives the impression of a man in such a hurry to save the world that he had no time for such distractions as romance.
But now, in a blistering new biography, Pulitzer-prize-winning journalist David Maraniss has pulled his exes out of the shadows.
In so doing, he has revealed an unflattering picture of a president so desperate to sell an image of himself as a pioneering race warrior that he has air-brushed many of the âwhiteâ elements from his life â" including that string of well-heeled, well-educated white girlfriends.
Obamaâs version of events, in his autobiography, is a moving story of a mixed-race child struggling to find his black identity after being deserted as a young child by his Kenyan father.
It tells how his grandfather was imprisoned by the British for helping the Mau Mau rebels in Kenya â" an assertion that Obamaâs step-grandmother later embellished with claims he was also tortured â" for which M araniss found no evidence.
Delighted Republican opponents are picking over the inconsistencies (38 at the last count) between Obamaâs own memoirs â" published in 1995 as he prepared to launch his political career â" and the facts uncovered by Maraniss.
Time and again, Obama, who has had to fight hard to convince other African Americans of his âblack credibilityâ, appears to have burnished his radical credentials, not least by playing up the roles of black people in his life and playing down the roles of the white.
And nowhere is this more apparent than in his romantic life.
For Genevieve Cook â" to whom admittedly the President alludes in his memoirs â" wasnât the first white girlfriend in his life, nor the last.
As a young student in the early Eighties at Occidental College, a small arts university in Los Angeles, Obama developed a serious crush on another student Alexandra McNear, who was co-editor of a college l iterary magazine which published two of Obamaâs poems.
McNear, described by Maraniss as âlithe and mysterious, with the face of a young Meryl Streep and a literary bohemian airâ, had just the sort of rarefied upbringing that might impress an amibitious young man.
Both her parents were established writers and her father, Erskine McNear, was the scion of a property empire. In the summer of 1981, Obama and McNear moved to New York, she to do a theatre course, he to finish his degree at Columbia University, so he could explore his black identity in a more African American city.
Far away from family and friends, Obamaâs first summer in the Big Apple in 1981 might have been lonely but, suggests Maraniss, for the presence of McNear.
She recalls admiring his intellect, his sense of humour and his good looks.
After a first date at a dimly lit Italian restaurant on Manhattanâs Upper East Side, they embarked on a two-month affair.
She remembers it as a âsummer of walking miles in the city, lingering over meals at restaurants, hanging out at the apartments, visiting art museums and talking about lifeâ.

New insight: Obama appears to have burnished his racial credentials by playing up the roles of black people in his life and playing down the roles of the white
When she went back to Los Angeles, their relationship continued, largely through an exchange of passionate if pompously intellectual letters.
They discussed everything from T.S. Eliot to German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche â" but mainly they discussed Barack Obama.
Supremely self-absorbed, Obama forever harped on about his search for meaning and identity.
He seemed oblivious to her feelings, once remarking that, tempting as it would be to run off with her when he finished his degree in New York, it would mean living âin some sense of compromise and retreatâ.
Obamaâs self-obsession would have left many women cold, if not bored to death, but McNear persevered.
Perhaps she appreciated his toe-curlingly pretentious notes on literature, like his observation that T.S. Elliotâs poem The Waste Land âcontains the same ecstatic vision which runs from Munzer [a somewhat obscure Reformation theologian] to Ye atsâ.
She told her diary that he was âthe closest friend I had, and that I really loved him but didnât know if we could sustain a relationship.â
Her instincts were correct.
A few months later, while Obama was visiting his mother in Honolulu, he wrote to inform McNear with cold detachment that he felt their relationship was changing from romantic love to âthe more quotidian, but finer bonds of friendshipâ.
McNear went on to scandalise her family by marrying a former Serbian boxer and convicted bank robber called Bob Bozic.
Next for Obama was Genevieve Cook, whom he met at that mutual friendâs flat at a Christmas Party in 1983.
Obama had graduated and was in a dull office job as he worked out what he wanted to do with his life.

Married life: Obama had a number of white girlfriends before he met his wife Michelle, the book reveals
She was three years older than him, and an assistant teacher at a private school in Brooklyn.
As Maraniss observes, âthere had been girlfriends before her but none quite like Genevieve,â who âengaged him in the deepest romantic relationship of his young lifeâ.
Cook is mentioned in Obamaâs memoirs as a mystery woman.
While never naming her, he wrote: âThere was a woman in New York that I loved. She was white. She had dark hair with specks of green in her eyes.
'Her voice sounded like a wind chime. We saw each other for almost a year.â
She shared many of Obamaâs obsessions. The daughter of a former Australian ambassador to the U.S., and a moneyed art historian who later remarried into a prominent American family, Genevieve, too, religiously kept a diary.
And, like Obama, she had a burning passion to save the world.
Within two months of meeting, they were seeing each other every Thursday nigh t and at weekends.
On Sundays, he would lounge around in his cheap, cockroach-infested flat in the less salubrious end of the Upper West Side, bare-chested in a blue and white sarong as he drank coffee and did the New York Times crossword.
His bedroom, she recalls, smelt of ârunning sweat, Brut spray deodorant and smokingâ.
He loved to cook and they would read together and discuss writers into the night.
Like McNear, Cook was attracted by the âmental exhilarationâ of his intellect, marvelling at how mature he was at 22, but dismayed by his remoteness and wariness about commitment.
Needless to say, he was as self-obsessed as ever.

Family man: Barack Obama sits with his wife Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha for a photograph in the Oval Office in the White House
When she told him that she loved him, his response was not âI love you, too,â but âthank youâ.
Cook described him as âan uncommon, earnest young manâ and confided to her diary: âHe is very beautiful â" more than he thinks himself to be.â
But there was another side to him she found unsettling.
âThe sexual warmth is definitely there â" but the rest of it has sharp edges and Iâm finding it all unsettling,â she wrote.
âHis warmth can be deceptive. Though he speaks sweet words and can be open and trusting, there is also that coolness.â
They often talked about race and Obama would confide that he felt like an âimposterâ as there was âhardly a black bone in his bodyâ.
She eventually told him he âneeded to go blackâ (to date a black woman), whereas he countered that he would never find a black woman âhe would feel truly comfortable withâ.
They moved i nto a flat together but their intellectual discussions eventually turned into fights over issues like the washing-up.
In the end, Cook tired of his emotional âwithheld-ness, his lack of spontaneityâ, and broke up with him in 1985.
Cook insists she couldnât have been more sympathetic about his confusion over his racial identity but thatâs not how Obama portrayed it in his memoirs.
He recounts taking his New York girlfriend to see a black play after which she âstarted talking about why black people are so angry all the timeâ.
They had a âbig fightâ in front of the theatre and she burst into tears and said she couldnât be black.
All very dramatic but Cook insisted to Maraniss that it never happened.

'Sexual warmth': Obama was 'an uncommon, earnest young man' and 'very beautiful', according to his ex-girlfriend Genevieve Cook
The only play she saw with Obama was entirely different â" British actress Billie Whitelaw performing a monologue written by Samuel Beckett, And there had been no row over race, she said.
Obama had to admit to Maraniss the incident happened not with Cook in New York but with someone else, though he wouldnât elaborate.
Did it really happen? He mixed dates and places to protect former girlfriendsâ identities, he said.
Soon after that period, he made strides in his career, moving to Chicago to work as a community organiser.
In a moment of acute foresight, Cook had told her diary that while she was not the woman for Obama, âthat lithe, bubbly, strong black lady is waiting somewhereâ.
She may or may not be âbubblyâ, but âstrongâ certainly sums up Michelle Obama.
However, before Obama met Michelle, he went on to have a relationship with another white woman in Chicago.
The woman, who like Cook wa s an anthropology graduate, was barely mentioned in Obamaâs memoirs, but by then he was trying to establish his African-American credentials by toiling in an impoverished and predominantly black area of Chicago.
Maraniss does not identify this new woman either, but says the relationship was âseriousâ and âended much like the one with Genevieve, when Obama was ready to make his next career moveâ.
Within four years, he had met Michelle in Chicago and the rest we know. Obama finally had the partnership he wanted history to record â" with a strong black woman, a descendant of slaves who had pushed her way up from humble roots.
But she, at least, is not a âdreamâ, unlike some of the other fantasies in his own autobiography.
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Did not mean -Bad -choices in -Nationalities-I have met Ladies-from all over the World-From -All over the World-One Decides-- Whenever-Who -And -Who evever-WILL be their -Life Partner
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Crock. He was just a kid/young man. Millions have that story but, didn't become the President of the USA. The author is selling books, eh?
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What does Hollywood and Obama have in common? Both manufacture and present a life of fiction and fantasy.
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Is it really necessary that we all pry to this extent into the social life of a politician? Surely his political policies, and the state of this country and our economy are vastly more important and interesting. Must we sink to this level?
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Crock. He was young and there weren't much variety where he lived. Selling books, eh?
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With his initials I'm surprised any girl went near him.
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Everything about Obama is fake except the damage he is doing to the economy.
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he's married with two children, his past relationships are exactly that the 'past'
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Hmmmm So does that make Obama 'Racist' 'Elitist' or both ? OR neither because he is Black ??
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A "Kiwi" is from New Zealand, not Oz
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