Last year, after Michael Wolff published Fire and Fury, the epic, sales-smashing, unforgiving gossip-dump depicting the can’t-make-this-stuff-up chaos and disarray of the Trump administration, the conventional wisdom was that Wolff wouldn’t be able to pull off another White House tell-all. Fire and Fury, which has reportedly sold more than 4 million copies to date, was simply too down-and-dirty, too explosive, too scandalous for any sources to be willing to talk to Wolff again. Surely he’d burned all of his bridges, the thinking went.

Apparently not. As Axios recently reported, Wolff interviewed some 150 people for the Fire and Fury sequel—out June 4 from Henry Holt—more than two-thirds of whom were repeat customers. (Former senior officials, Trump pals, etc.) And once again, the dirt is abundant. Donald Trump insults everyone in his orbit, repeatedly, viciously, and—always privately—they return the favor.

“I can’t get the asshole off the phone,” Rupert Murdoch once said of Trump, “holding out the phone as the president’s voice rambled into the air,” according to Wolff. The same section of the book details tensions between Rupert and James Murdoch, resulting from the latter’s disgust over the Fox News prime-time lineup, namely Sean Hannity. “Father and son had screaming fights over Hannity and Trump,” Wolff writes in Siege, a copy of which I got my hands on a few days ago. “The Murdoch family had become collaborators, declared the younger Murdoch. The world would remember. The future of their company was at stake.” Wolff also writes, of Hannity, that the 9 P.M. anchor’s “cheerleading had begun to wear thin, and Trump started to turn on him. . . . For all of Hannity’s flattery, for all of his zealous commitment to the president, Trump, in almost equal proportion, had become disdainful of him. This was partly standard practice. Sooner or later, Trump felt contempt for anyone who showed him too much devotion.” (A spokesman for Rupert Murdoch didn’t immediately have a comment Wednesday morning. Through a spokeswoman, James Murdoch declined to comment. Hannity, through a spokeswoman, reiterated a previous statement about his interactions with Trump: “Nobody has ever gotten my relationship with Donald Trump right, ever.”)

At 315 pages, Siege is overflowing with such titillating material, which is sure to make it another tour de force for the Trump resistance, while inviting dismissive barbs from an administration that will presumably seek to portray the tome as the corrosive mudslinging of a fabulist—one who, it is worth noting, was given extensive, arguably unprecedented access to the West Wing and its top officials when he was working on Fire and Fury two years ago. Wolff will also presumably weather further criticism from his naysayers in the journalism community, who would argue that he plays loose and fast with opaquely sourced, uncorroborated rumors. And Steve Bannon is once again at the center of this book, though he’s no longer at the center of the West Wing, much as he aspires to be. He’s a kind of co-narrator.

“Michael Wolff’s first book was destroyed for its countless inaccuracies, made up accounts, and use of shady sources with personal political agendas that even the author himself admitted to,” said White House spokesman Hogan Gidley. “This latest book is just another attempt by Wolff to line his own pockets by pushing lies and pure fantasy aimed at attacking the President.”

Wolff’s book began making headlines a week before its publication, when its most incendiary revelations leaked out via The Guardian: Robert Mueller’s team, at the urging of top special-counsel prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, drew up a three-count obstruction-of-justice indictment last year, only to back off because of fears that Trump might do something rash like shut down the Russia probe. “As much as Andrew Weissmann wanted to indict the president, Bob Mueller wanted to stay in business,” Wolff writes.