This book was just okay. It seemed to be billed more as a book about Reagan's ideological refinements and philosophical evolutions, and there was some of that, but it was very surface level. Nothing deep, which was a disappointment for me.
Really this book is a solid, well written recount of events from the end of the '76 primary to the '80 general election. Frankly however, it was not all that engaging, mostly because of the material itself. Shirley writes in the same incredibly readable style as his other books (this book picks up almost immediately after his book about the '76 campaign), but there is just less consequential stuff happening here. The book really didn't start to pick up for me until the primary campaign, but that was already near the end.
I certainly learned some things, and it's obviously very well-researched and pithily written, but ultimately I think Shirley was held back by the time period itself, as well as his choice to treat it the way he did.