Just
in time for Election Day,
Beinhart, re-enlisting in the liberal
ranks of Michael Moore, Nicholson Baker, and the The Manchurian
Candidate, serves up a barn-burning political thriller complete
with recipes for how to steal a presidential election.
The
key figure, and virtually the only innocent, in the game
of ol' hardball politics is David Goldberg, a college librarian
who gets eased into a second job cataloguing the papers of
billionaire developer Alan Carston Stowe and then suddenly
learns that Col. Jack Morgan, of Homeland Security, is sending
four underlngs to kill him because he's found out a dread
secret.
The good news is that David's alerted to the plot
by Morgan's sexy wife Niobe, somebody he's already paying
special attention to. The bad news is that he doesn't know
what he's supposed to know and has no obvious way to find
out in the five days before the forthcoming election ends,
the historic contest between hard-riding figurehead Augustus
Winfield Scott and his come-from-nowhere Democratic challenger,
Sen. Anne Lynn Murpy.
Both candidates field organizations
bent on decimating the opposition, but Scott's America-first
minions, David gradually realizes, have in reserve "one-one-three," a
knockout punch as diabolical as it is legal.
The man-on-the-run
plot is proficient persiflage; the bonus here is another
dose of anti-Administration satire from the author of American
Hero (1993), filmed with its target changed from Bush 41
to Clinton as Wag the Dog.
Beinhart lays about him with a
nuclear-tipped cudgel, analyzing Fog Facts ("known, but not
known"), casting Kenneth Starr as a color commentator for
Fox (Scott's angry post-debate outburst is "such a trivial,
innocuous event. After all, it's not sex"), and watching
Morgan worry whether David is "some deep cover, Democratic
Party operative, or some Arab terrorist, or spying for Israel."
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