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Public Men: A Novel
 
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Public Men: A Novel [Hardcover]

Allen Drury (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 2, 1998
"We live in the Republic of Feel-Good in a time when all the scum of America is rising to the top."

So begins Public Men, the final novel of "the University trilogy" in which Pulitzer Prize winner Allen Drury concludes some fifty years in the lives of the members of the World War II generation whose stories he began on the eve of the war in the novel Toward What Bright Glory?

The second novel, Into What Far Harbor?, carries them on through the challenges, triumphs, and tragedies of the war and on to the years when they must worry about their world and the world of their children against the backdrop of the later Vietnam War.

Now in Public Men, set in the year 2000, when most are either about to embark upon, or have already entered, their eighties, the fifteen who remain of the original twenty-six meet for a last reunion on the beautiful campus where they shared a fondly remembered fraternity house and the hopes and dreams of youth confronted by history's most chaotic and ominously foreboding century.

Public Men concerns them all, but overshadowing their lives as in the two previous novels is the life of Richard Emmett Wilson -- "Willie," now and for many years a United States Senator from his native California; his legislative triumphs on Capitol Hill; the tragic death of his first wife, Donna; his second and third marriages; his political disagreements with, but ultimate pride in, his older son Latt as Latt follows in his footsteps into the House of Representatives and then into the Senate; and, finally, Willie's campaign for president, threatened by other personal tragedies, most devastatingly those of his gentle, vulnerable younger son, Amos.

Through it all, Willie, often in alliance with Tim Bates, does battle against what he sees as the "phony liberalism" of his famous fraternity brother Dr. René ("Renny") Suratt; and Renny and his powerful friends of academe and the media in turn do battle with what they see as the "reactionary conservatism" of Willie and his friends. Tim, wielder of a savage commentator's pen, refers to "Renny and his crew" as "the scum" he attacks. Renny responds with equally scathing pen and matching contempt. As with many of the public men in Public Men, these three fraternity brothers sum up what they regard as the major political and social issues of end-of-the-millennium twentieth century.

Allen Drury skillfully meshes the public and private lives of his characters against the Washington world that has formed the rich backdrop of many of his twenty-five books.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Allen Drury's most famous book, Advise and Consent, published in 1960, started him down the road of the political novel, a path he cleaved to until his death in 1998. Drury was unabashedly conservative in his outlook and his books reflect his bias: the arch-villain of his last novel, in fact, is an utterly loathsome liberal with extreme political views and unsavory sexual habits. In a nutshell, Public Men, the final volume of the trilogy that began with Toward What Bright Glory? and continued with What Far Harbor?, follows the lives of a group of men who met in college on the eve of World War II. Now in their late 70s and early 80s, the boys in the band have dwindled from 26 to 15. The main players, however, are Richard Emmet Wilson, a U.S. senator from California, Tim Bates, a political commentator, and René Suratt, a professor. Once fraternity brothers, these three have become mortal political enemies, with Wilson and Bates on the side of Right and René aligned with the powerful (and corrupt) forces of liberal academia and the media.

As the novel moves back and forth between the year 2000 and the 1960s, Drury traces the trajectory of all these lives, including a failed presidential campaign, many personal tragedies and triumphs, and, through it all, the tricky terrain of personal relationships across the ideological divide. Political junkies will appreciate the twists and turns of this Washington insider novel. Readers who require a modicum of literary polish, however, will be disappointed. Drury's talents lie in plotting his intricate tales; his writing is merely serviceable. Describing Wilson and his wife Donna's reaction to their son marrying an African American woman, Drury writes:

When "the kids" as he and Donna thought of them, did finally come over a couple of days later to seek their blessing, Ti-Anna was so tense and Latt so defensive in her behalf that the visit ended in near disaster. He and Donna were not at all surprised when the elopement came, even though its abruptness did embarrass them a little among friends and his Senate colleagues. But they made the best of it, bland in public, trying with moderate and fluctuating success to get everyone in both families on a plane of reasonably cordial acceptance.
Grammatically correct, and it gets the job done, but it's hardly lyrical. Still, if it's Beltway drama you want, count on Drury to deliver. --Alix Wilber

From Publishers Weekly

Drury died recently after a long career that never approached the apogee of 1961's Pulitzer Prize-winning Advise and Consent. In this final volume of his University Novels series (Into What Far Harbor?), he fires one last hyperbolic salvo at those he deems culpable for America's plummeting moral, cultural and political values. Liberals and the media (especially "New York's Mother of All Newspapers" and "Washington's Daily Conscience of the Universe") draw heavy fire. The shaky plot assigned to shoulder this polemical load focuses upon aging California Senator Richard Emmett "Willie" Wilson, whom the author depicts as a controversial spokesman for "middle of the road" values, though Wilson's opponents seem more incensed by his smug, golden-boy persona than by his moderate political agenda. As the novel opens, Wilson is organizing a reunion in the year 2001 for the surviving members of his 1939 Alpha Zeta fraternity house. The reunion chapters bracket a series of flashbacks to the milestones and millstones of the senator's very distinguished, very public life. Among these are the death of his first wife, confrontations in the 1960s with his radical activist son and an aborted run for the presidency during the mid-1980s. His nemesis at every juncture is Dr. Renny Suratt, rogue frat brother, nationally prominent liberal gadfly and, as Drury portrays him, a cross between Abbie Hoffman and Lucifer. Wilson and Suratt persist for decades in their barely civilized debate, fueling it with an inexhaustible supply of enmity and mutual jealousy. Unfortunately for the reader, it's like watching two drivers who engage in strident highway shouting matches on their daily commute between glass house and ivory tower. The story crumbles beneath the weight of its own world-weariness and despair for a nation that no longer measures up to the author's ideals.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Scribner; 1ST edition (November 2, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684807033
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684807034
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 5.9 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,603,145 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Political thriller that's a tribute to a great writer, November 2, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Public Men: A Novel (Hardcover)

PUBLIC MEN, The third novel in the recently deceased Allen Drury's Stanford University fraternity brothers trilogy is the final journey for this class of men. Though the political thriller expected from a Drury novel is faint, the story line remains extremely interesting due to the insight of the octogenarian group of shakers looking back on their respective lives. All three novels in this set are quite good for different reasons and are highly recommended (see TOWARD WHAT BRIGHT GLORY? and INTO WHAT FAR HARBOR?), but so are most of Mr. Drury's other works (see, for example, the Pulitzer Prize winning ADVICE AND CONSENT).

Harriet Klausner

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2 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly disappointing, July 3, 2001
By 
"thomasporter" (Fairfield, Ct USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Public Men: A Novel (Hardcover)
I do not even know where to begin with this review, so let us start at the very beggining, the jacket cover. I think that there was a mix up in assembling the book that I received. The jacket that I read says that the story takes place while the old guys are in their late 70's and early 80's. What I think the jacket meant to say is that the STORY takes place in the '70's and the 80's. The first several pages do in fact deal with the hero, Willie, setting up a reunion in the year 2000, but that is it! For the next 300 pages one reads about these individuals going through their various mid-life duldrums and challanges.

The last 80 or so pages then get to the reunion itself. I thought the first two books in the trilogy (I did not read these) delt with the time periods covered in this book. Incredible!

I could go on and on, but suffice it to say that this is a sad piece of work for a Pulitzer Prize winning author.

Read "Advise and Consent" and be truly spellbound.

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