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Ask a question or Order this book Browse our books Search our books Book dealer info | VIDAL, GORE United States: Essays 1952-1992 Random House, New York, 1993. Book Club (BCE/BOMC). Hard Cover. Like New/Like New. FULL SIZE BOOK CLUB HARDCOVER. Minor shelf wear. Binding tight, pages clean, bright, & unmarked. 1295 pages, comprising 114 essays. "From the age of Eisenhower to the dawning of the Clinton era, Gore Vidal's United States offers an incomparably rich tapestry of American intellectual and political life in a tumultuous period. It also provides the best, most sustained exposure possible to the most wide-ranging, acute, and original literary intelligence of the post — World War II years. United States is an essential book in the canon of twentieth-century American literature and an endlessly fascinating work." "This mammoth omnibus of 114 essays is vintage Vidal, a marvelous compendium of sharp wit and independent judgment that confirms his status as a man of letters. The prolific novelist/critic offers withering putdowns of the French 'new novel,' billionaire Howard Hughes and bestseller lists. He displays a reporter's hard nose for facts in travel pieces on Nasser's Egypt and Mongolia. He pens definitive portraits of H. L. Mencken, Oscar Wilde, Anthony Burgess, L. Frank Baum. He reminisces on his boyhood friendship with Amelia Earhart, who, we learn, was in love with Vidal's father, Eugene, FDR's director of commercial aviation. Mingling patrician impulses and egalitarian, subversive sentiments, Vidal takes unfashionable stances, as when he urges the legalization of drugs or ending military aid to the Middle East, including Israel. His sense of the United States as hub of an overextended empire informs pieces on 'American sissy' Theodore Roosevelt, JFK, CIA spook E. Howard Hunt and the bloated military budget." -- Publishers Weekly. Offered for US$ 54.00 by: Yesterday's Muse Books - Book number: 1504220 See more books from our catalog: Government & Politics | |||