USA TODAY International Edition

Book imagines Hillary Clinton never marrying Bill

- Barbara VanDenburg­h

“Rodham” poses the tantalizin­g question about what her life would have been like.

Hillary Clinton was, by the estimation­s of many political pundits, one of the most qualified presidenti­al candidate in history Still, the former first lady, New York senator and secretary of State lost the election to one of the least politicall­y qualified candidates to ever win the office.

It defied logic, common sense and polling that a woman with Clinton’s lengthy resume and career of public service would lose to Donald Trump. Was she that bad a candidate, or was she the victim of a larger cultural moment beyond her control? Was it because she was a woman? Or was she weighed down by her husband’s baggage, including an affair with a White House intern and allegation­s of sexual misconduct? Could she have broken through that final glass ceiling if she hadn’t married Bill Clinton?

Those are the tantalizin­g questions posed in Curtis Sittenfeld’s fictional alternate history, “Rodham” ( Random House, 432 pp., eegE), which imagines a timeline where 20- something Yale Law School graduate Hillary Rodham ultimately rejects Bill Clinton’s marriage proposal.

It’s difficult to turn down. Hillary is unlucky in love, an overachiev­er whose brains repel potential suitors. None of her eligible classmates, from middle school in the Chicago suburbs through Wellesley College and Yale, want to date a brain.

That is, until she meets Bill. Tall, leonine, handsome Bill, the Southern seeming gentleman from Arkansas who could have his pick of the litter but fixates on the “defiantly dowdy and flat- voweled” girl whose mind matches his own.

But the warning signs are there from the beginning. At the start of their courtship they meet at a diner, where Bill orders plate after heaping plate of french fries, dipping them greedily into his ice cream sundae. The symbolism is clear: Bill is a man of unmanageab­le appetites, and he soon proves himself incapable of remaining faithful to Hillary, even while professing his love.

This fictional Hillary ultimately turns down the cheater’s proposal and sets off on her own. It’s a fateful decision that kicks off an alternate timeline that’s part thought experiment, part wish- fulfillment fantasy ( at least for some readers). Without Hillary by his side, Bill’s 1992 presidenti­al candidacy goes down in flames. The presidenti­al succession is altered: George H. W. Bush serves two terms, followed by a one- term Jerry Brown presidency, a two- term John McCain presidency and a two- term Barack Obama presidency.

Sittenfeld is an adept mimic, channeling Hillary’s voice in a first- person narrative that places the reader in her head as she navigates love and the American electorate. It’s a familiar place, but never a fully living, breathing one – a neat parlor trick with no real magic behind it.

While the story of her courtship with Bill is vibrant with heartache, the political minutiae that follows – debate prep, fundraiser schmoozing, stump speeches, strategy meetings – drags the story to a crawl.

Neverthele­ss, as a thought experiment, “Rodham” is delectably discussabl­e, a book tailor- made for book clubs. And “Rodham’s” epigraph, a quote from Hillary Clinton – the real Hillary – from her 2017 memoir, “What Happened,” hits different after finishing the book: “My marriage to Bill Clinton was the most consequent­ial decision of my life. I said no the first two times he asked me. But the third time, I said yes. And I’d do it again.”

One can’t help wondering by the end of “Rodham” – would she really?

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