Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Washington Book

How to Read Politics and Politicians

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The Pulitzer Prize–winning opinion columnist at The New York Times and "an absolutely original genius" (Bob Woodward, The Washington Post) Carlos Lozada explores how people in power reveal themselves through their books and writings and, in doing so, illuminate the personal, political, and cultural conflictions driving Washington and the nation.
A longtime book critic and columnist in Washington, Carlos Lozada dissects all manner of texts: commission reports, political reporting, Supreme Court decisions, and congressional inquiries to understand the controversies animating life in the capital. He also reads copious books by politicians and top officials: tell-all accounts by administration insiders, campaign biographies by candidates longing for high office, revisionist memoirs by those leaving those offices behind. With this "unsparing and gentle, erudite and entertaining" (Steve Coll, Pulitzer Prize­–winning author of Ghost Wars) essay collection, Lozada argues that no matter how carefully political figures sanitize their experiences, positions, and records, they almost always let the truth slip through. They show us their faults and blind spots, their ambitions and compromises, and their underlying motives and insecurities. Whether they mean to or not, they tell us who they really are.

Lozada notes that Barack Obama constantly invoked the power of his life story in his memoirs and speeches, a sign of how he tried to transform his personal symbolism from inspiration on the campaign trail into an all-purpose government tool. Donald Trump revealed not just his vanity, but his utter isolation from the world, long before he entered the bubble of the White House. In deft and lacerating prose, Lozada interprets the unresolved tensions of Hillary Clinton's ideological beliefs. He imagines the wonderful memoir of George H.W. Bush could have given us but instead left scattered throughout various books and letters. He explores why Kamala Harris has struggled to carve out a distinctive role as vice president. He explains how Ron DeSantis's pitch to America is just a list of enemies. And he even glimpses what Vladimir Putin fears the most, and why he seeks conflict with the west. He does so all through their own books, and their own words.

This "monumental read" (The Guardian) is the perfect guide to the state of our politics, and the men and women who dominate the terrain. It explores the construction of personal identity, the delusions of leadership, and the mix of subservience and ambition that can define a life in politics. The more we read the stories of Washington, the clearer our understanding of the competing visions of our country.
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2023

      A Pulitzer Prize--winning opinion columnist at the New York Times, Lozada aims to show us how people in power reveal themselves in what they write, considering not just books and speeches but commission reports, political reporting, Supreme Court decisions, congressional inquiries, letters, and more. No matter how carefully the powerful curate their words, he argues, they end up letting their true selves shine through. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2024
      Politicians are all too often hard to truly parse, despite the fact that they spend almost every waking hour trying to communicate their agendas. Lozada has, for several decades now, made it his job to enable the public to better understand politicians, who they are, what they really stand for, and what they're really saying. To that end, he has put together a collection of his columns that have appeared for the last couple of decades in the Washington Post and the New York Times. His focus is to analyze nationally prominent politicians' written words, mostly via books, sometimes speeches. He analyzes a lot of presidents, obviously--Biden, Trump, Obama, Bush--but other movers and shakers too, like Dick Cheney and Hilary Clinton. He digs past the obvious and the superficial into the nuance and true meaning underneath. More than just providing analysis, Lozada is willing to lay out criticisms up and down the political spectrum. His insights are piquant and enlightening, the result being an enhanced understanding of the complicated mess that is American politics.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2024
      An insider's account of the nation's capital based on the political literature surrounding it. As a Pulitzer Prize-winning book critic, Lozada collects observations on the countless books he's inhaled concerning the city's power politics. "Not just masochism--transcendent masochism," he writes, gamely. "That's what people think it is like to read political books." Nonetheless, most people want to know what these books say, even if they're written by people far down the pecking order. They're not interested in the quality of the work so much as the news that the books contain. Lozada is admirably evenhanded: He shakes his head at Mike Pence's ability to find excuses for the boss who wasn't troubled by the prospect of him being hanged in front of the Capitol, just as much as he bemoans Kamala Harris' "eagerness to stay on both sides of difficult questions." Not content to read everything ever committed to print on Reagan, Clinton, and their fellow denizens of the Oval Office, Lozada wishes for books that don't exist, such as a memoir by George H.W. Bush. "Perhaps he feared that his difficulties articulating a vision in speeches would recur on the page," he ventures, while allowing that the lack of such a book makes the record incomplete. The books of Washington reveal a lot, whether Obama's early obnoxiousness, tempered in later years by a welcome gravitas; Trump's braying self-regard, which is no news to anyone but still annoys, even in the form of a pr�cis; or the theorizing of scholars such as the well-known Samuel Huntington and the less well-known Albert O. Hirschman. The author's audience is self-selecting, but they'll be well served by his catholic survey. Those who like to read about national politics will be rewarded, and even entertained, by Lozada's pages.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading