LA
TIMES BOOK REVIEW
Menace,
comedy to rival real-life politics
By
TOM NOLAN
Special
to The Times
The
Librarian, Larry Beinhart
Nation
Books: 434 pp., $15.95 paper
If
filmmaker Michael Moore
were to
collaborate with novelist Carl Hiaasen to write a paranoid-satirical
political-thriller, the
result might be much like Edgar Award-winning author
Larry Beinhart's "The Librarian":
a wildly inventive, often hilarious and more-than-occasionally over-the-top
novel having to do with the perpetration of unspeakably dirty tricks In the
final weeks and days of an American presidential-election campaign In an atmosphere
not so very unlike ours now.
Beinhart, author of four earlier novels (Including "American Hero," which was
the basis for the movie "Wag the Dog") is no stranger to outrageous political
imaginings. But he takes a quantum outward leap in "The Librarian," whose eponymous
protagonist begins by moonlighting as an archivist in a private library and
ends with the fate of the republic in his shaky hands.
University librarian David Goldberg helps a colleague by substituting for her
in the employ of a rich, aging, conservative Virginia real-estate developer
("one of our national leaders In the creation of sprawl"). The employer is
a member of a secret Inner circle determined to secure the reelection of an
Incumbent Republican president at any cost. Goldberg, a beleaguered left-winger
in a post-Homeland Security climate, has been feigning an "Indifference to
politics" that he knows is "really resignation." His attitude Is a "defense
against a sense that all things liberal were falling and all the liberal spokesmen
had tongues that rattled gibberish and the Limbaughs and Coulters were so high
on their turn of the wheel that their gibberish was heard as eloquence." So
he's unprepared for the prospects of Sen. Anne Lynn Murphy, the underdog Democratic
candidate pitted against Incumbent chief executive Augustus Winthrop Scott.
But Goldberg becomes privy to his employer's crew's treacherous pre-election
machinations, In part through the librarian's attraction to a beautiful and
willful woman who's part of the manipulators' circle. Before long, he's in
dangerously over his head and complaining, "I'm in the wrong movie.... I'd
thought it was a Woody Alien film, a neurotic love story, but then it turned
into a crazy thriller, with sadists chasing me." Those sadists are trying to
stop a fleeing Goldberg from telling what he's learned (or what they think
he's learned) about their Ingenious schemes to hijack the election, a wicked
bag of tricks that Includes provoking street riots, faking a terrorist attack
and resorting to the super secret "Plan One One Three": a political scheme
so heinously plausible it's more frightening than all those sadists' mayhem.
"The Librarian" shifts between Goldberg's first-person voice and an omniscient
third- person that tracks the bad guys. This keeps comedy and menace in balance
and heightens the tension and suspense up to and beyond the story's ending. The
book concludes (and it spoils nothing to say so) with Goldberg telling readers
that a satisfactory resolution of all these events hinges on what they, "the
people," decide to do or not do, once the conspiracy Is made public: "Will they
Just want to get It over within twenty-six minutes, solved like the conflict
In a sitcom Or will they demand to get the facts clearly and In detail and sort
the wheat from the chaff and the Hash and the trash"
Rather than seeming a cop-out or a letdown, this open-ended finale cleverly
examples the novel's most serious point. "The Librarian" Is filled with biting
caricatures of all sorts of political types: the sandlot bully who grows up
to be head of Homeland Security; the reality- TV show producer who "evolves" Into
a McLuhan-esque campaign consultant; the media "commentators" who prattle banalities.
Mocking right-wingers and left-leaners in (almost) equal measure,
"The Librarian" gets the pulse racing, the mind reeling and the blood boiling.
It stiffens the spine and firms the resolve. What more could one ask of a timely
political thriller, two months before a national election .
[NY
Times] [Hartford
Courant] [Kirkus Reviews]