I am so conflicted about what to say about This Town.
You’ve probably heard about it: the dishy tell-all book
about Washington’s inner workings, a book whose author brings impeccable
credentials to the task. He is Mark Leibovich, chief national correspondent for
The New York Times Magazine.
Formerly, he was the newspaper’s chief national political correspondent, and
also worked for the Washington Post.
As you’d expect, Leibovich has had a front-row seat to the
nation’s capitol follies. And therein lies the delicious, guilty pleasure of
reading “this” book. There’s gossip, hilarious profiles of movers and shakers,
a jaded but exuberant perspective on what goes on in DC.
His writing is sharp and riotously funny. Many passages beg
to be read aloud. For example, this description of a Senator, at journalist Tim
Russert’s funeral, trying to look—well, funereal: “[he] walks slowly into the
church and adheres to the distinctive code of posture at the fancy-pants
funeral: head bowed, conspicuously biting the lips, squinting extra hard for
the full telegenic grief effect.”
Leibovich brings his insider’s eye and dark humor to
funerals, parties, political conventions, lunch meetings, and other assorted
settings. There’s often a gleeful tone at skewering the bloviating politicians,
journalists, lobbyists, and assorted hangers-on. Any reader with curiosity
about what really goes on inside the
Beltway will enjoy the author’s ringside seat.
But—here’s the thing. When Leibovich looks under the rocks,
he sees and write about serious dysfunction in national politics—creepy trends
that will send your cynic-o-meter soaring. His main point is not just that
politicians have big egos—we knew that—it’s that their motives are hopelessly
intertwined with the interests of lobbying firms. The “formers” (former
Congressmen, former White House staffers, etc) parlay their access to influence
by joining the big K street firms offering fat salaries. Everyone, ultimately,
is trying to suck up to someone in power. Journalists are not immune. It seems
to be one big, snarled ball of back scratching and self-interest.
Depressed yet? Well, I was, as I read this book. So, I’m
conflicted about whether to recommend it. Probably, I do. It’s wonderfully well
written and offers a reasoned critique of DC culture. But be prepared to feel
hopeless about the system in “this town.” Don’t say I didn’t warn you!
1 comment:
I had put this on my library list but after your review decided to remove it. So many books I want to read and so little time, can't waste any of it on a so-so book!
You do have readers, I just have so much trouble getting these comment gateways to work that I give up after a try or two.
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