From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Washington, D.C., is a city ruled by insiders, and few writers have broken through the social and public politics that govern it as eloquently as Williams. This posthumous collection presents a series of remarkably well-observed and intelligent profiles of the great and minor figures who have made D.C. for the past two decades. Williams, a longtime writer for the
Washington Post and
Vanity Fair, has a fine eye for telling details—the license plates on a bureaucrat's car, the folds of satin in a dying socialite's dress—but it's more than just details that make Williams's profiles so engaging. Underlying each representation is Williams's ability to make her characters as complicated on the page as they are in real life. It's that same concern that governs the heartbreaking personal pieces in the last third of the book, which covers Williams's losing battle with cancer. Here she is on her impending death: "whatever happens to me now, I've earned the knowledge some people never gain, that my span is finite and I still have the chance to rise and rise to life's generosity." In these final pieces, Williams steps out from under the self-effacing veil that made her such a fine journalist and speaks of her own experiences. The result is a collection of writing that dissolves the boundaries between the personal and the political to arrive at an obvious but no less startling conclusion.
(Nov.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Review
"...offers many pleasures and surprises...this collection is a splendid memorial to an elegant prose stylist." --
The Los Angeles Times, November 27, 2005"A master at capturing human spirit and character in print" --
Karen Algeo Krizman, Rocky Mountain News, November 11, 2005"Her writing...stands out for what simmers just beneath, whether it's a passage of excavatory reporting or a personal, painful insight..." --
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune, November 28, 2005"Piercing perceptiveness about the messy human beings lying beneath the portentous personas of great Washington figures" --
David Brooks, New York Times, November 6, 2005"Williams's journalistic gifts include her delicious use of detail, wicked humor and a psychological insight..." --
The Washington Post, November 17, 2005... what this book reveals is a woman...cheated by fate, but facing reality unflinchingly and asserting personal honor despite it all. --
David Brooks, The New York Times, November 6, 2005...combines peerless political anthropology with heartbreaking insight into the complexities of family life and her own struggle with cancer. --
Newsweek, November 21, 2005A fitting tribute... [Williams was] a master at capturing human spirit and character...readers...simply looking for great writing won't be disappointed. --
The Rocky Mountain News, November 11, 2005We'ree lucky to have this collection to remind us of what we'll be missing with Marjorie Williams gone. --
The Buffalo News, November 13, 2005Williams is so knowing about Washingtons folkways...that readers will feel they are sitting down with a world-class political storyteller. --
The Buffalo News, November 13, 2005
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
See all Editorial Reviews