
photo credit: Stephen Cummings
Recently, my husband sent me this article from Slate magazine that analyzed Obama’s vacation reading list… Here is an excerpt of their analysis:
Even the news media have their vacation rituals. One of them is overinterpreting the presidential summer reading list. Monday the White House obliged, offering the list of five books president Obama has packed for his trip:
• The Way Home by George Pelecanos, a crime thriller based in Washington, D.C.;
• Lush Life by Richard Price, a story of race and class set in New York’s Lower East Side;
• Tom Friedman’s Hot, Flat, and Crowded, on the benefits to America of an environmental revolution;
• John Adams by David McCullough;
• Plai! nsong by Kent Haruf, a drama about the life of eight dif ferent characters living in a Colorado prairie community.
What does this list of American authors tell us about the president? Well, it’s not as fun as the year Bush decided to read Camus’ The Stranger. George Bush reading a French Existentialist is like Obama reading a Cabela’s catalog. Plus, it was a story about a one-time layabout turned unrepentant Arab killer, which, if you wanted to overinterpret things, gave you enough material to get you through a few packs of Gauloises.
The Obama selection is not overtly controversial. In 2006, Bush’s list included The Great Influenza, about the 1918 flu. If Obama were reading that today while his White House was issuing a new report about the H1N1 virus, he’d start a national panic. But his list is also clearly not poll-tested. Women played a key role in Obama’s victory in 2008. They’re swing voters. And yet all of Obama’s authors are white men. The subject of the longest book, John Adams, is a dead white male. Obama couldn’t get away with that in an election year, and, given his aides’ penchant for cleaning up little things like this, we’ll soon see the president with a copy of Kate Walbert’s A Short History of Women.
The Price and Pelecanos books are very similar—urban, East Coast crime stories by two authors who have also written for the HBO series The Wire. Only the Haruf provides geographical and literary diversity. The McCullough book seems like the kind of thing presidents get with the job. When presidents read presidential biographies, it must be like a user’s manual for the office. Sure, Adams occupied it 200 years ago, but just as Obama read Team of Rivals when picking his Cabinet and Jonathan Alter’s The Defining Moment on FDR’s 100 days when forming his initial agenda, he’ll probably now start dropping Adams references in the coming months.
For the full article, click http://www.slate.com/id/2226142/
So, what would YOU like to see Obama reading? Personally, I loved the mix of genre and overall quality of his choices – and I just love Plainsong… I haven’t tackled Lush Life yet, but it has gotten so much buzz since it came out last year, I’m intrigued.
Any thoughts? By the way, my giveaway will be on Wednesday this week to coincide with TLC’s Book Tour…



Wonder if his reading list is actually chosen by a Whitehouse committee?
I’m just grateful he doesn’t feel blindsided by the question, “So, what do you like to read?”