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Darth Irule


All vacations have their rituals: slapping sunscreen on wriggling kids, eating ice cream after dinner, and hiding the holes in the rental-house drywall. Presidential vacations have rituals, too: peekaboo with the press corps, highly managed casual social engagements, and golf. Always there must be the golf.

Even the news media have their vacation rituals. One of them is overinterpreting the presidential summer reading list. Monday the White House obliged, offering the list of five books president Obama has packed for his trip:

• The Way Home by George Pelecanos, a crime thriller based in Washington, D.C.;
• Lush Life by Richard Price, a story of race and class set in New York's Lower East Side;
• Tom Friedman's Hot, Flat, and Crowded, on the benefits to America of an environmental revolution;
• John Adams by David McCullough;
• Plainsong by Kent Haruf, a drama about the life of eight different characters living in a Colorado prairie community.

What does this list of American authors tell us about the president? Well, it's not as fun as the year Bush decided to read Camus' The Stranger. George Bush reading a French Existentialist is like Obama reading a Cabela's catalog. Plus, it was a story about a one-time layabout turned unrepentant Arab killer, which, if you wanted to overinterpret things, gave you enough material to get you through a few packs of Gauloises.

The Obama selection is not overtly controversial. In 2006, Bush's list included The Great Influenza, about the 1918 flu. If Obama were reading that today while his White House was issuing a new report about the H1N1 virus, he'd start a national panic. But his list is also clearly not poll-tested. Women played a key role in Obama's victory in 2008. They're swing voters. And yet all of Obama's authors are white men. The subject of the longest book, John Adams, is a dead white male. Obama couldn't get away with that in an election year, and, given his aides' penchant for cleaning up little things like this, we'll soon see the president with a copy of Kate Walbert's A Short History of Women.

The Price and Pelecanos books are very similar—urban, East Coast crime stories by two authors who have also written for the HBO series The Wire. Only the Haruf provides geographical and literary diversity. The McCullough book seems like the kind of thing presidents get with the job. When presidents read presidential biographies, it must be like a user's manual for the office. Sure, Adams occupied it 200 years ago, but just as Obama read Team of Rivals when picking his Cabinet and Jonathan Alter's The Defining Moment on FDR's 100 days when forming his initial agenda, he'll probably now start dropping Adams references in the coming months.

http://www.slate.com/id/2226142?yahoo=y
Xyls
I've only read one book because I wanted to over the last three years.





























































































No, it was not Twilight.
Bladepaul
Interesting. I think you left one out though:

1. Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky

T 800
QUOTE (Bladepaul @ Aug 25 2009, 07:34 PM) *
Interesting. I think you left one out though:

1. Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky



Oh please you obviously don't know what socialism is.
Bladepaul
QUOTE (T 800 @ Aug 26 2009, 08:42 PM) *
QUOTE (Bladepaul @ Aug 25 2009, 07:34 PM) *
Interesting. I think you left one out though:

1. Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky



Oh please you obviously don't know what socialism is.



Now that's hilarious. You're telling that to the wroooong person, brother.
Drachen
In all honesty I don't really care what books a president is reading, that's none of my business.
eyin
Who gives a flying cheese cake what the president is reading for all i care he could be reading How to run a country for dummies!!!!!!!!!!!

I would still hate him!!!!!!!!!
MC
I don't really care what the president reads, either. I don't like him, but he can read whatever he wants. Of course, his books are chosen by his PR guys and he probably never reads anyway, though.
Lord John
Kind of why the media is so mucked up.

If he read George Orwell's "1984" the media would be like " HE WANTS TO TAKE OVER AMERICA AND BECOME BIG BROTHER." No one ever thinks that the president or any politician might just read books for fun...
Man
He can be reading the Satanic Bible for all i care. Also, I highly doubt he'd be caught reading any controversial books out in public, he knows how the right wing could and will turn it into something negative.
Slain
That's the way of the world, journalists finding significant things in insignificant places. But still, at least they don't make stuff up so that right-wing nuts totally fly of the handle and...

...never mind.
Bladepaul
QUOTE (Slain @ Aug 30 2009, 03:10 AM) *
That's the way of the world, journalists finding significant things in insignificant places. But still, at least they don't make stuff up so that right-wing nuts totally fly of the handle and...

...never mind.



I am not certain what you are getting at. It's so easy to put labels on things you don't understand so that you don't have to go through the effort of understanding them. After all, it is much easier for one to sit on one's posterior rather than educating oneself, am I right?
Slain
QUOTE (Bladepaul @ Aug 30 2009, 06:12 AM) *
I am not certain what you are getting at. It's so easy to put labels on things you don't understand so that you don't have to go through the effort of understanding them. After all, it is much easier for one to sit on one's posterior rather than educating oneself, am I right?


The point that I'm getting at is the fact that journalists make things up that send right wing nutters into spasms of hatred. It was just an example of one of the things that they do, sorry to have offended you if you are a journalist... or a right wing nut.
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