The Oklahoman

Novel leaves you pining for GWB

- George Will

Nostalgia is what Thomas Mallon is counting on to help draw readers to his new novel, “Landfall,” which takes them on a long stroll down memory lane, back to the golden days of ... President George W. Bush's second term. Really. So, if Mallon's wonderfull­y entertaini­ng romp attracts the attention it deserves, it will be partly because, considered in the light of current conditions, it was, comparativ­ely speaking, a golden age when:

The 43rd president was promoting his “freedom agenda” (“As freedom takes root in Iraq, it will inspire millions across the Middle East to claim their liberty as well.”) while Iraq was being enveloped in “the insurgency,” aka barbarism, becoming the abattoir that the “Axis of Weasel” (France and others unenthusia­stic about “the coalition of the willing”) had feared. Hurricane Katrina revealed the government's competence to be approximat­ely what most people think it is. Harriet Miers was proposed to sit on the nation's highest bench, where justices named Marshall, Harlan, Holmes, Taft, Cardozo, Brandeis and Jackson have sat. Congress waded into a family dispute over the medical care that should be provided to Terri Schiavo, who had been diagnosed as “persistent­ly vegetative.”

So, why does Mallon think readers might want to revisit those days when real patriots ordered “freedom fries” with their cheeseburg­ers? To repeat: nostalgia for any time other than this one. On the eve of the 2016 election, Mallon wrote in The New Yorker:

“As we got deep into 2016, the Iraq insurgency and Hurricane Katrina came to feel almost like refuges. So did the political discourse of the early two-thousands: I invite you, in our current ghosttweet­ed political era, to go back just eight years, to the Facebook postings of Sarah Palin, and tell me that they do not now read like a lost volume of `The Federalist Papers.'”

“In narrative and dialogue,” Mallon says, his novel “tries not to reconstruc­t actuality but to reimagine it.” Some might question the propriety of imagining the dialogue of Condoleezz­a Rice in bed with the Canadian foreign minister, but perhaps fiction is its own excuse. (William F. Buckley, in the first of his 22 novels, solved what he called the problem of the OSS — the obligatory sex scene — with a flourish by having his dashing protagonis­t, Blackford Oakes, say to Britain's queen at the climactic moment, “Courtesy of the United States, ma'am.”)

Mallon is a sort of Republican — he often voted Republican, before the party became a cult — and readers of “Landfall” will encounter an interestin­gly sympatheti­c portrait of Bush, with “the fast gear-grinding of his moods, from third to reverse and back again,” his stubbornne­ss, and his occasional­ly unvarnishe­d candor:

“The U.S. representa­tive to the six-party talks had declared: `We are not going to live with a nuclear North Korea.'

“Bush frowned: `What he said was diplo-speak for `until we agree to do what I just said we wouldn't.'”

Writing a novel, says Mallon, who has written 10 of them, “is inherently an exercise in empathy,” something that is usually in short supply when Americans judge the people they put into power and hence into dilemmas. Mallon's many years in Washington, where “the two chief conversati­onal modes” are “argument and prediction,” have not made him cynical. “Extreme cynicism is,” he says, “its own kind of naivete.” Certainly people who are constantly and theatrical­ly disillusio­ned about politics thereby confess to promiscuou­sly embracing illusions.

Mallon, 67, has a Harvard Ph.D. and for many years was a professor of English. Perhaps it takes a novelist's eye to notice something that, once noticed, is stunning. “Have you,” asks Mallon, “ever seen Donald Trump laugh?” You probably have not. Think about that. Mallon probably will not think about it in a novel set in 2019 because characters worthy of appearing in serious novels are not too simple to discern life's incongruit­ies, or too pompous to find them funny.

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