A searching and powerfully written novel about a dark-horse presidential candidate who seems to be the answer to the hopes of the American voters. Is he, perhaps, too good to be true?
A political thriller, where the thrills are in the writing
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
This is an especially instructive book as we head into another major election. Reed Karaim, who has done his time as a journalist on the presidential campaign trail, takes a step back from the action here and offers a literate, important novel that is far greater than the sum of the daily, discordant parts that go into a campaign. This is the world of sound bites, wire dispatches, canned stump speeches and cynical journalists, elevated to the emotional and intellectual level of Greek tragedy. Cliff O'Connell, the reporter-narrator, pursues a potentially career making story, but one that could destroy a worthy candidate and a worthy man. It's a fascinating exploration of ambition, truth, and ethics in the maelstrom, but the real appeal is in Karaim's deft prose. When the idiocies of the daily campaign and its coverage start to get you down, pick up this volume to remember why the process is a noble one, after all.
Compelling, important, and poetic
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
By the bottom of the first page, I was clearly on for the ride of "If Men Were Angels." I believe Karaim has achieved something truly important: a near-thriller, highly plausible, which makes us readers question our own ethical hierarchies. I also admire this writer's capacity for both indelible images and that "sense of a room" which I recognized repeatedly but could not have put into words myself.
A terrific story about truth and deceit in a campaign.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Did George W. Bush do cocaine? Whether you care or not, a presidential campaign once again is becoming a frenzy of speculation and possible scandal over something that may have happened decades earlier in a candidate's personal life. Decisions are made about how much to tell, how much to reveal, how much to hold back. By the candidates, by the reporters who cover them. Their lives can be changed by what they choose, and the nation's life can be affected as well. Want to know what it feels like inside? Read Reed Karaim's book. A compelling and often suspenseful tale, it takes you inside a fictional campaign to watch how these characters of politics and the press dance with one another and around one another and how their histories and values guide their decisions about truth and deceit. One revelation of my own: I am a friend of Karaim's. I am also a political writer, and I know a terrific book when I see one.
A great first book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I highly recommend Reed Karaim's suspenseful, complex first novel. While on the most basic level it presents itself as a political thriller, it also offers the careful reader a myriad of subtle riches. Karaim has a poet's ear for language (the audio cassette must be a delight), and a keen eye for pop culture in today's America. His experience in the 1992 presidential campaign helps render the all-too-believable clash between a reporter's implacable search for facts and an ambitious Senator's spin machine. With his easy command of small, yet startling insights that suggest Updike, Karaim has fashioned a densely populated story set on the grand stage that is America. Like a Montana landscape in winter, it gives us the terrible beauty of truth -- and its consequences. It's a winner.
I highly recomend this book!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
"If Men Were Angels" is a powerful and poetic work of fiction. Beautifully written by Reed Karaim. I found myself unable to put the book down. Having followed Clinton during the 92' election, Karaim brings an insight that only someone who has been there could. Karaim has an extraordinary talent for pointing out the little things in life. Although the book is primarily a political drama, there is just enough humor to keep the story moving along at a brisk pace.I don't want to give away the plot, but the story is about a reporter who is following an underdog presidential candidate. At first, the candidate appears to be too good to be true. But as the reporter digs deeper into the candidate's past he discovers that things are not always as they seem. There is a romantic subplot involving an ex-girlfriend who suddenly reappears in the reporter's life. Anyone who has been through a messy break-up will be able to relate to this part of the story. There are many twists and turns leading up to the surprising conclusion.I read about three to four books a month and this is the best book I've read in a long time.I highly recomend this book.Ann Shin
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