Paperback cover of No Way to Treat a First Lady, by Christopher Buckley, 2002. |
Novelist Christopher Buckley |
As the political atmosphere seems to get worse and worse by
the day, it feels almost quaint to recall the late 1990’s and early 2000’s.
Bill and Hillary! Bob Dole! W! Al Gore! Novelist Christopher Buckley does an
excellent job conjuring up that era in his 2002 novel No Way to Treat a
First Lady. In the novel, First Lady Elizabeth Tyler MacMann wakes up to
find a dead president next to her in bed. The evening before, the couple had
quarreled over the President’s late-night visit to the Lincoln Bedroom, where
he had an assignation with singer and movie star Babette Van Anka. After
questioning, the First Lady is arrested for the assassination of her late
husband.
No Way to Treat a First Lady leads us through the
“Trial of the Millennium” that inevitably ensues. The First Lady has entrusted
one of the most famous defense attorneys in the country, Boyce “Shameless”
Baylor to defend her. Awkward backstory: Boyce was engaged to Beth in law
school, but she broke it off when she met the future President. Boyce has cycled
through four marriages, the latest one lasting all of six months. As Boyce
says, “We were blissfully happy the first two months.” (p.40) Boyce’s current
flame is Perri Pettengill, who hosts a legal talk show called Hard Gavel. Perri
is known for wearing very tight sweaters. She’s become so famous that “Tom
Wolfe had mentioned her in an essay, calling her ‘the Lemon Tort.’” (p.14)
I won’t spoil any more of the plot, but Buckley does an
excellent job of winding this improbable case through its many twists and
turns. Buckley is especially adept and handling the back and forth of the
courtroom scenes. You could make the argument that there’s no one to really
root for in the novel, but once Buckley compared Beth to Natalie Wood, she
instantly had my sympathy. And in my head, I had cast Alec Baldwin as Boyce
Baylor, so I found pretty much anything Baylor said to be quite hilarious.
There are many humorous lines sprinkled throughout No Way
to Treat a First Lady. The press’ nickname for Beth was “Lady Bethmac,” and
Buckley gets off a great Macbeth pun by naming a Secret Service agent
Woody Birnam.
My other favorite lines from the book include:
“Hypocrisy is a prerogative of the press but must under no
circumstances be tolerated in politicians.” (p.24)
“Sometimes the American Dream, like God, works in mysterious
ways.” (p.113)
I also laughed heartily at Boyce’s list of Baby Boomer
accomplishments: “Disco, junk bonds, silicone implants, colorized movies, the
whole concept of stress as a philosophical justification for self-indulgence.”
(p.133)
Fans of Buckley’s other Washington, D.C. satires should note
that John O. Banion, the lead character in Little Green Men, briefly
appears, as does Nick Naylor, the unscrupulous lobbyist from Thank You for
Smoking. Naylor has taken a job as a publicist for Babette Van Anka, a
position that is more and more fraught with danger as the novel progresses.
Buckley relentlessly skewers the ridiculousness of the press
throughout the book. There are also many opportunities for the skewering of the
legal profession, and one of my favorite quotes was this one:
“There are few spectacles more pathetic than a roomful of
otherwise responsible people trying to squirm out of a civic duty enshrined in
Magna Carta as one of the signal boons of democracy. On the other hand, who in
his right mind wants to serve on a jury?” (p.66)
As someone who has served on a jury, I can identify with that
sentiment.
If you’re looking for an escape from the current political
climate, you’ll enjoy No Way to Treat a First Lady.
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