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The Running Mate [Hardcover]

Joe Klein (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 18, 2000
Hailed as "astonishingly powerful" by The New York Times, and "written perfectly" by The Washington Post, Primary Colors, with over one million hardcover copies in print, was the most- talked-about political novel of the past century. The brilliant portrait of a charming, ambitious, amoral young Southerner on his way to the White House struck an instantly recognizable chord, and catapulted Anonymous--aka New Yorker Washington correspondent Joe Klein--into the public eye as a novelist of the first rank.

Now, in The Running Mate, Klein takes the reader on an exuberant, wicked, and unerringly wise political journey with Senator Charlie Martin, a decorated veteran of the war in Vietnam. The experience of combat and his easy dominance of home-state politics have made Charlie fearless. He's a hot, if occasionally reckless, political property--dashing, honorable, and irreverent.

And then Charlie's life begins to fall apart. He campaigns for the presidency and fails. The wacky father of a volunteer decks him--in front of the cameras; a well-kept secret from Charlie's Vietnam days is revealed; he reluctantly finds himself at the center of a friend's cliff-hanging confirmation process for Secretary of Defense....And Senator Martin begins to learn that politics in an era of spin, marketing, and vicious personal assaults can be as treacherous--and life-threatening--as combat was.

Finally, Charlie Martin must confront the two greatest challenges of his life--a political opponent who has no scruples and a dazzling, unconventional woman who loves him but is appalled by his life's work. Charlie's dilemma is one that has come to haunt contemporary American politics: Is it possible to be a good politician and a good man? Can you live in the public glare and still construct a habitable life?

No observer of contemporary politics has a clearer eye than Joe Klein, or can so effortlessly show the moral complexities that arise when public and private lives intertwine. Here, in his superb new novel, he takes a good man's attempt to come to terms with the harsh new realities of the modern political arena--and gives us a book that reverberates with truth about ourselves.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Senator Charlie Martin, the slightly John McCain-like war hero of Joe Klein's The Running Mate, thought getting blown up in Vietnam was tough, but presidential politics proves the uglier jungle battlefield. Charlie blows his challenge to the incumbent, Jack Stanton (the delightfully slimy protagonist of Klein's roman à clef about Clinton's 1992 campaign), by refusing to smear Stanton for his affair with his wife's stylist, "the Happy Hairdresser." Then he brushes a campaign worker's breast--by accident--and gets punched on TV by her irate dad. Charlie does, however, revive his career by springing a veteran named Mustafa from a Vietnamese prison, and soon he's on Stanton's shortlist for veep and politicking to get an old war buddy named defense secretary. In this political novel par excellence, skeletons dance out of practically everybody's closet. Charlie's vivid trip back to Vietnam turns up a son he sired in a one-night stand; his wickedly droll, still healthy Southern press secretary is HIV positive; Mustafa has society reentry problems; major politicians turn out to be closet pill heads, boozehounds, or rapists of staffers ("Apparently, she suffered an involuntary loss of her virginity in the Cannon Building"). Even Republicans hoard deadly secrets. And politics isn't about policies, it's about artful Machiavellian maneuvers, backstabbing, and feeding scandals to ignorant, arrogant press know-it-alls. (You can't say Klein lacks chutzpah!) Ornery but honest Charlie finds politics "becoming more noxious and also more sterile as the century staggered home." One politico says, "It's a big game hunt, and we're the game.... The jungle'll be left to pygmies and hyenas."

Klein hails and nails Stanton/Clinton for skillful cynicism: "He was all yak-butter and horseshit," says Charlie. Fans of Primary Colors will love this book's raffish authenticity. But the canvas is vaster--the Vietnam chapter is as evocative as the American ones--the story sprawls Tom Wolfe-ishly, and Klein is not just scoring points, he's a moralist hunting big game. --Tim Appelo

Review

Praise for Primary Colors:

"An absolutely dazzling book, the best political novel in many years, one that manages to be simultaneously cynical and redemptive, funny and profound, reportorial, satirical, and thrilling."
--Christopher Buckley, The New Yorker

"Breaks all the rules and lives to tell about it...there is a wonderful honesty about Primary Colors, a refusal to give into the conventional interpretation of people and events that cripples so much that is written about politics."
--Michael Lewis, The New York Times Book Review

"This sensitively wrought, deftly drawn, acid-tongued political novel...is the best aides' eye view of politics since All the King's Men."
--Walter Shapiro, Time

"The dialogue throws sparks, capturing perfectly the lingo of political professionals.... [The author] is a writer of considerable gifts; he has intimate knowledge of the political world."
--Andrew Ferguson, The Wall Street Journal

"A delight to read. The author knows politics...and writes like a dream."
--Alex Beam, The Boston Globe

"The rollicking new satire... Primary Colors gives the reader an entertaining, inside and often very funny look at the daily workings of a political campaign."
--Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

"[The author] has matched Teddy White. Nowadays, only fiction can do justice to the truth."
--Richard Cohen, The Washington Post

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: The Dial Press; 1 edition (April 18, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385333862
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385333863
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,966,923 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

32 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (11)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:
 (5)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (32 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Primary Colors readers might well like this book less., April 25, 2000
This review is from: The Running Mate (Hardcover)
I stayed away from "Primary Colors" as the "Anonymous" gimmick was deserving of many adjectives, none of them positive. I did see the movie adaptation hence the title of this review. Allowing for the tendency for the movie to be less than the book, I'm confident it was a good read.

This is an extremely well written work by a great writer with a sharp political eye, and a subtle and not so subtle, savage wit. There is repetition in this book and that's where "Primary Colors" readers might feel annoyed. There were very similar events between this book and the movie of the first novel.

I thought this was one extremely well written tale, but as another wrote, "only fiction can do justice to the truth", this was commentary on not only our electoral system, and those who seek office but the confirmation process as well. And as nauseating as the performance of most of the characters are, as you read you will draw parallels to real life events, and politics in general.

Calling this book fiction is a stretch. It would be too easy to say that the behavior this book describes is why only 43% of eligible voters showed up at the last Presidential Election, or would it? Same comment for why anyone would want to go through a confirmation hearing, or for that matter subject himself or herself to a National Campaign for office without it being the only alternative to a very long maximum security prison sentence.

The book is satirical; the book is full of extremely clever humor, as in wondering if a square dance step has anything to do with El Alamein. But as you read keep reminding yourself this is fiction, and if you convince yourself this truly is pure fiction, you are either a greater patriot than I or one who actually would enjoy being part of the circus that is Washington.

More morality tale than comedy, entertaining but sobering to say the least.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Book that Improves on Every Mistake of Primary Colors, September 6, 2000
By 
John W. Flynt (Jackson, MS USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Running Mate (Audio Cassette)
I heard Joe Klein speak at my school, Millsaps College, and was impressed enough with his insider knowledge to give Primary Colors a second read. Knowing who "Anonymous" was didn't change the context of the book much. It was still a novel about wondering who wrote the novel. The guessing game of which politico he was tabloiding overshadowed any literary aspects of the novel.

This speaks volumes to why THE RUNNING MATE is so much smarter that PRIMARY COLORS. The characters are composites of our favorite pundits, but the most important dynamic of the book is character and truth, not shock and satire.

The character portraits are as compelling as the political portraits. We open as our character has his marriage proposal rejected, while fighting a sexual misunderstanding and failing at a run for the presidency. The descriptions of the veteran Senator returning to Vietnam afterwards are particularly powerful.

THE RUNNING MATE is delightfully complex. You voyeuristically watch the Senator as he manipulates the people that watch him. We love the characters for the traits that make them great Americans, while simultaneously watching those same traits damn them. I particularly like how Klein uses many of the events from original novel as a backdrop. The events of Primary Colors seriously affect the new characters. It makes Klein's political timeline a universe of its own.

When he spoke at Millsaps, Klein mentioned that he wanted to "write the great modern novel about politics." And this time he has succeeded. This one is definitely a serious work that deserves another read, to catch the subtleties of Klein's observations of modern politics.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A political junkie's fix, May 14, 2000
This review is from: The Running Mate (Hardcover)
I'm the first to admit I've waited for this latest work by Joe Klein. I'm a political junkie, and love to read about the inner workings of contemporary political life.

Running Mate is a good read; the Great American Novel it's not, but who cares? We don't get enough political fiction (unless you count thrillers, which I don't). I devoured Primary Colors when it came out and, while waiting for Running Mate, was reduced to reading nonfiction -- Katherine Graham's autobiography -- to satisfy my need for political knowledge. Needless to say, novels are more fun to read and Running Mate does not disappoint.

Another piece of political fiction I enjoyed recently was a lighthearted look at the motivations of people who get into political activism -- a novel called Love Songs of the Tone-Deaf by Asher Brauner.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
I think our senator is in a state of shock," Nell had said, and Patrick Dunn had trouble imagining that: Charlie Martin shocked by love; shocked by anything. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
campaign kids, campaign mode
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Charlie Martin, Muffler Man, Lee Butler, Des Pointe, New York, Senator Martin, Mary Proctor, Mike Coleman, Pat Dunn, Morey Richardson, White House, Francesca Warren, United States, Jessica Mahon, Sly Parkinson, Joan Butler, Oskar Millar, Hilton Devereaux, Oak Street, Lanny Scott, Lincoln Rathburn, Mammoth Falls, Armed Services Committee, Don O'Brien, Muffler Boy
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