She has no choice but to concede that she had "the great good fortune to be born into a life of wealth and privilege," but she's determined to convince us that starting at the top was not "any kind of birthright or foregone conclusion" and comes with a lot of disadvantages.
It's just a page later that she describes starting at the top and attending her first meeting at Trump Entertainment Resorts at 25, the youngest director of a publicly traded company. She's nervous, of course, but that's because her leg up is an enormous burden she had to overcome. Think of Brad Pitt complaining about his good looks. Later, sensing the futility of this argument, she orders the reader who might resent her good fortune to just "Get over it."
Whatever her title -- Trump's lawyers claim anti-nepotism rules do not apply to West Wing positions -- it's not because she's a crack real estate and fashion maven that she will be a heartbeat or two away from the presidency. Although the book was written when the birther movement and the White House were just a twinkle in her father's eye, she recounts her early training for her upcoming role of acting First Lady. When it came time to greet party guests at Trump Tower, Ivanka's mother (Trump's first wife Ivana) would make herself scarce. Ivanka "learned to be a good and gracious host" by rushing happily to answer the door in my mother's absence. ... so that I'd barely notice when my mother finally made her appearance."
If her stepmother, Melania, ever moves to the White House, she will undoubtedly notice. In the meantime, Ivanka may make a good substitute as First Lady and make Kalorama great (again). By contrast when Vice President-elect Mike Pence temporarily moved into a white colonial with green shutters in a leafy D.C. suburb, neighbours greeted the Republican interloper with a barrage of rainbow flags flapping from their homes to quietly protest his virulent stand as governor of Indiana to ensure bakers would never be forced to turn out cakes with a groom and groom on top.
The Trump-Kushners have no such baggage and are likely to fit in as well in Washington as they did on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Will Ivanka, like first ladies before her with their literacy, mental health and just say no initiatives, take up women's issues that Republicans, including her father, don't normally embrace? She has pledged to so, and she may mean it, unlike her father who treats his campaign promises as metaphors. In this instance, we should hope that the acorn falls far from the tree. Ivanka, welcome to Washington -- and not a minute too soon.
Carlson is a Bloomberg View columnist.