In some ways, the 1830s observations of French researcher
Alexis de Tocqueville have never been improved upon. De Tocqueville saw the young nation in its infancy and yet his insights into American life and government remain surprisingly current.
Maybe someday someone will write a better political novel than
Robert Penn Warren’s 1947
Pulitzer Prize winner about the rise of Willie Stark (aka “the Boss”), a power-hungry, populist Southern governor, believed to have been modeled on former
Louisiana governor and US
Sen. Huey Long. But it hasn’t happened yet.
This 1997 novel follows three generations in a family of well-connected Washingtonians, spanning a century (starting with World War I) of American politics. The story of the powerful Behl family and their interactions with a large cast of politicians, their spouses, reporters, lawyers, generals, and civil servants is dark but intelligent, compelling, and disturbingly true to life.
British writer
Robert Graves penned this 1934 classic as though he were writing the autobiography of Roman
Emperor Tiberius Claudius. Set in 1st-century
Rome, this novel is packed with enough intrigue, murder, greed, and lust to make contemporary
Washington, D.C., look tame.
Many readers call this book one of the finest political biographies of a generation. In the third of a four-part series, award-winning biographer Robert A. Caro follows the life of
Lyndon Baines Johnson from 1949 to 1960, the years in which Johnson, one of the most politically talented men Washington has ever seen, consolidated his hold over the US Senate. At the center of this story are both the power-hungry Johnson and the US system itself.
Tom Wolfe’s story of a New York bond trader caught up in a hit-and-run accident magnificently skewers the greed of 1990s New York, even as it tells a larger story about power and access and how both can serve to warp democratic ideals.
Washington Post correspondent Wil Haygood blends the political with the personal in this portrait of
White House butler Eugene Allen. Allen, an African-American, served eight
US presidents (from
Harry Truman to
Ronald Reagan) for 34 years – a span of time that included remarkable gains in civil rights. A movie based on this story, directed by
Lee Daniels and starring
Forest Whitaker, is scheduled for release this month.
In the near future, in the Republic of Gilead, a theocratic state rules and keeps women in a state of subjugation. This 1985 classic by Canadian master
Margaret Atwood explores power and the ways in which women allow it to be lost and won.
The judicial branch of the
US government has perhaps inspired less literature than the executive and legislative. But journalist
Jeffrey Toobin helps to bridge the gap with his fascinating portrait of the
US Supreme Court. This nonfiction narrative is so skillfully assembled that it qualifies as a page turner.
Mark Leibovich, chief national correspondent for The New York Times Magazine, takes no prisoners in “This Town,” his tell-all account of life in
Washington, D.C. The media, lobbyists, politicians, and their ambitious staff members – no one comes out looking very good in this dark yet lively and compulsively readable account of the real lives of those who traffic in power.
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