Amazon.com Review
Richard Bausch's 19-year-old protagonist, Walter Marshall, is a naive young man in a time when cynicism has not yet hardened the American spirit. He reveres the recently assassinated Jack Kennedy, is a complete idealist, and wants to be president so that he can change the world. He is also an inept innocent with little chance of making it in politics, a realization that fails to keep him from trying to please everyone, including the two young women to whom he is simultaneously engaged. Bausch handles Walter's unworldliness with gentle comedy, as if he somehow pines for a bit of the before-the-flood innocence irrevocably lost to his own generation in the Vietnam War. In the end, Walter gives up on the White House but fails to lose his endearing optimism.
From Publishers Weekly
Bausch is a wily and subtle writer. Readers may initially wonder why he has made his new protagonist a naive, ingenuous, acutely self-conscious and foolishly idealistic young man with grand aspirations. Lacking qualifications or ability, Walter Marshall, 19, dreams of becoming President of the United States. But halfway into the novel, when a birthday party?meant also to announce Walter's reluctant engagement to a woman older but not much more worldly than he?becomes a carnival of eccentric characters and mysterious events, the hook is in. Then, when Walter finds himself participating in a black sit-in that is menaced by a white mob, our consciousness is raised along with his. Readers who don't recognize the title as an echo of broadcaster Walter Winchell's signature salvo will find a bravura passage bringing it into perspective as a revelation of how society receives what one character calls "a show biz" version of government activities, which substitutes for what may be sordid truth. The novel is set in Washington, D.C., in 1964. In chronicling Walter's coming-of-age, Bausch holds a mirror up to 1960s America, whose vague dreams of Camelot were soon to sour in the debacle of Vietnam and the ensuing political scandals. Walter's slide from idealism to disillusionment is revealed through brilliant passages of mundane (but revealing) conversations, hilarious comic moments and characters' poignant attempts to communicate with one another. Within a few days, the devoutly Catholic, sexually repressed and excessively polite Walter proposes to yet another woman, makes an unrealistic commitment to a desperate man, discovers that his mother will marry a suitor he loathes and comes to understand that the world isn't the misty, patriotic vision he has always believed it to be. Bausch's (Rebel Powers) ability to make us empathize with his pathetically artless character is as flawless as his evocation of the political and social issues of the time. $30,000 ad/promo; author tour; first serial and dramatic rights: Harriet Wasserman.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

