Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair
and Balanced Look at the Right by Al Franken
|
Book Reviews
Amazon.com
Having previously dissected the factual
inaccuracies of a single bellicose talk show host in
Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot, Al Franken takes his
fight to a larger foe: President George W. Bush, the
Bush Administration, Ann Coulter, Bill OReilly,
and scores of other conservatives whom, he says, are
playing loose with the facts. It's a lot of ground to
cover, as evidenced by the 43 chapters in Lies and the
Lying Liars Who Tell Them, but the results are often
entertaining and insightful. Franken occupies a unique
place in the modern political dialogue as perhaps the
media's only comedy writer and performer who is also
a Harvard fellow as well as a liberal political commentator.
This unique and vaguely lonely position lends a charming
quixotic quality to adventures such as a tense encounter
with the Fox News staff at the National Press Club,
a challenge to fisticuffs with National Review Editor
Rich Lowry, and an oddly sweet admissions visit to ultra-conservative
Bob Jones University (with a young research assistant
posing as his son when Franken's real-life son refuses
to participate in the charade). Less useful are comic
book dramatizations of "Supply Side Jesus"
and a fictitious Vietnam War story featuring the numerous
righties who, Franken intimates, improperly avoided
service. And Franken's criticisms of conservative talk
show hosts Sean Hannity, OReilly, and columnist
Coulter, while admirable in their attention to detail,
fail to shed much new light on people who have built
careers on broad arguments and relentless self-aggrandizement.
But Franken is at his best, and most compellingly readable,
when he backs off the wackiness and the personal grudges
and writes about more personal matters such as the political
circus surrounding the memorial service of the late
Senator Paul Wellstone. But even on these more serious
topics, Franken's wit is still present and, in fact,
grows sharper. In a time when much political discourse
is composed of rage and shouting, it's refreshing that
Al Franken is able to shout in a witty manner.
Publishers Weekly
This witty, scrupulously researched and
expertly delivered audio production accomplishes what
few nonfiction audio books manage to do-it realizes
the full potential of the format. Even those who have
already read Franken's book should take the time to
listen to this superb audio adaptation, which is enhanced
by Franken's impeccable sense of comic timing, eerily
precise impersonations and inclusion of source materials.
In the most compelling section, for example, Franken
juxtaposes two revealing clips to illustrate his view
that the late Senator Paul Wellstone's memorial was
"cynically distorted for partisan political advantage"
not by the Democrats, but by the Republicans. The first
clip is from Rush Limbaugh's radio show, where he proclaims
in a heavy, lugubrious voice, "The Democrats wrenched
Wellstone's soul right out of the grave, assumed it
for themselves and then used it for their own blatant,
selfish political ambitions.... Show me where the grief
was!" Franken follows this with an excerpt from
the memorial-which will bring tears to the eyes of any
listener, partisan or non-in which David McLaughlin
pays tribute to his younger brother, Will, who was Wellstone's
driver, bodyguard, adviser and "the one who kept
Paul going." By turns sad, funny and serious (but
always satirical), this audio book has all the entertainment
value of fiction (and even a one-act play called The
Waitress and The Lawyer based on one of President Bush's
radio addresses), but the issues Franken raises will
stay with listeners long after their laughter has died
down.
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Lies
and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced
Look at the Right by Al Franken
|