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Home Front: Politix
Al Gore's daughter pens "angry, down-and-dirty roman a clef" about the Clintons
2007-07-02
SAMMY'S HOUSE
By Kristin Gore
Hyperion. 384. $24.95

Kristin Gore, the second of Al and Tipper Gore's three daughters, has been known as the one with a hyperactive funny bone. . . . "Sammy's Hill," published three years ago, introduced lovable, klutzy Samantha (Sammy) Joyce, then an aide to Sen. Robert Gary. Now, in "Sammy's House," Gary is vice president, in the administration of President Max Wye, and Sammy works on health-care issues in the White House.

The new book is readable, sometimes funny and certainly interesting, but ultimately it has the problem of being two different novels that don't fit together. Perhaps two-thirds of Gore's story is high-grade chick-lit about Sammy's romantic adventures and professional mishaps. The rest can only be read as an angry, down-and-dirty roman a clef in which President Wye and Vice President Gary stand in for President Clinton and Vice President Gore; we watch as the former becomes embroiled in a scandal that horrifies the honorable No. 2 who has served him loyally. Kristin Gore is a comic writer, but there's nothing remotely funny about her scathing fictional portrait of Clinton. . . .

The book starts as chick-lit. Sammy is sweet, smart, sexy and scatterbrained. . . . Meanwhile, a darker story begins to surface. President Wye, a former governor of Louisiana, is sometimes brilliant, but "he always stared at himself for too long in mirrors," "he wanted to please too many people to be able to consistently take tough stands," and "he lacked a strong inner compass." There was a problem during the campaign when reporters realized that Wye's stump speech had plagiarized an obscure foreign politician . . . .

Now, two years into the presidency, a far bigger scandal looms. President Wye claims to have not used alcohol for many years. But our Sammy, in her Nancy Drew mode, is among the first to learn that's not true. Soon the president is behaving erratically. He's leaving incoherent voice-mail messages around town, and rumors are spreading. Worse, as Sammy knows, he's also been using an illegal experimental drug to combat his drinking. At a televised news conference, he flatly denies he's had a drink in years, although many people know better. An independent counsel is appointed, and subpoenas begin to fly. Where will it end? Will the erring president survive like Clinton or go down like Nixon? We must take this drinking-and-lying scandal as an analogy to Clinton's problem with bimbo eruptions in general and Monica Lewinsky in particular. . . .

The upstanding Vice President Gary is agonized by the scandal and, before he goes to testify, confides in Sammy -- they seem to have almost a father-daughter relationship: "I didn't realize how weak he truly is. . . . It's just amazing how quickly a person you thought you knew can completely disappoint you. . . . And now we're all trapped. . . . Now he's made us all look like liars."

The roman a clef doesn't stop with the president and vice president. The first lady has a nasty disposition, a "glossy smile," a "hairsprayed coif" and "heavy perfume" (it makes Sammy sneeze), and her "paranoia was legendary." . . .

In all this, Gore demonstrates narrative skill and a knack for good dialogue and vivid descriptions. But will readers who come to this expecting chick-lit enjoy the political hardball, or will political types endure Sammy's romantic tribulations? Gore should have gone one way or the other. If she had written this as a political novel, without the cute stuff, it would certainly have been a cut above average in that genre. As it is, Kristin Gore has not told us anything about Bill Clinton that we haven't known for years. Still, for Al Gore's daughter to remind us of the former president's failings (and of her father's virtues) in this very public manner, at a time when Al Gore may still seek his party's presidential nomination, and Clinton's wife might be his rival, leaves us wondering if her excursion into recent history can be entirely innocent of political intent.
Posted by:Mike

#3  I like how Alchohol fits into the picture though since the immediate mental connection is with Bush W. She's a sly girl. I think she was a staff writer for Futurama some time ago.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2007-07-02 19:25  

#2  One of the great secrets is how both Al and Tipper have a burning hatred of Bill and Hillary. For more than eight years, B&H treated A&T like lower class dogs.

Hillary in particular treated Tipper as if she was a despised servant, frequently belittling her as fat, ill-educated and lower class (only graduating from Boston College instead of Wellesley, like Hillary). Hillary also like to sneer at Al to his face.

For his part, Bill saw Al as an errand boy and gopher. "Go get me a cup of coffee, Al". Which is how he treated a lot of his subordinates, like the Secret Service detail, who despised him. Bill enjoyed embarrassing Al by contradicting him, having him lie in Bill's behalf, and then denying everything.

Yep, A&T would not be unhappy to see B&H sold into slavery.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-07-02 16:35  

#1  I hope Kristin has a good bodyguard. People close to the Clintons that have talked have had mysterious "accidents".
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-07-02 15:39  

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