EBOOK

The Columnist

Jeffrey Frank
(0)
Pages
240
Year
2001
Language
English

About

It a cocktail party, George H. W. Bush encourages Brandon Sladder, the prominent Washington columnist, to write his memoirs. Sladder has, after all, known just about everyone of importance. He has talked on intimate terms with world leaders, been a witness to enormous change, and expressed weighty opinions on important matters of state. He believes that his own life story could add much more than a footnote to our age. But what is meant to be a look back at his life and our times turns out to be far more revealing.
The Columnist is Sladder's attempt to burnish his image for posterity. What emerges is something else: the misadventures of an irresistibly loathsome man -- self-important, social climbing, dangerously oblivious. He seems to be remarkably destructive to those who know him best -- employers, rivals, lovers, and family. In Brandon Sladder, Jeffrey Frank has created one of the most memorable rogues in contemporary fiction.
By turns hilarious and dismaying, The Columnist is a dead-on, elegantly written portrait of the media and politics of the second half of the twentieth century.

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Reviews

"A guilty pleasure, nasty and deliciously wicked. Jeffrey Frank has created an unforgettable character who is lovably hateable -- a pompous, ambitious, narcissistic snake who slithers his way into power and fame. You want to hit him over the head with a shovel, along with most of the other smug creatures in this blast of a book. As social commentary, The Columnist is dead-on; as a comic novel, it
Susan Orlean, author of The Orchid Thief
"This is satire of the most exquisite kind: darkly hilarious and so wickedly true it will leave half of Washington in extremis and the other half in throes of schadenfreude. A masterly and dazzling performance."
Christopher Buckley, author of Thank You for Smoking
"In Brandon Sladder, Frank has nailed that hybrid of self-importance, opportunism, humorlessness, and sanctimony that seems peculiar to Washington journalists."
Kurt Andersen, author of Turn of the Century

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