The reports are in about the books President Obama is looking at on his annual trip to Martha’s Vineyard. According to reports from the Los Angeles Times and the AP, Obama purchased five books on his trip to the Vineyard bookseller Bunch of Grapes: Marianna Baer’s Frost, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, Daniel Woodrell’s Bayou Trilogy, Emma Donoghue’s Room, and Ward Just’s Rodin’s Debutante.
Assuming that Brave New World and Frost are for his daughters, this leaves six books that are presumably for presidential consumption, and they may constitute the oddest assortment of presidential reading material ever disclosed, for a number of reasons. First, five of the six are novels, and the near-absence of nonfiction sends the wrong message for any president, because it sets him up for the charge that he is out of touch with reality.
Sure enough, the list has already prompted this accusation. As Reuters described his selections, “President Barack Obama, perhaps seeking a break from harsh reality after a tough summer battling the economy and Republicans in Congress, has picked a summer reading list that is long on fiction.”
Beyond the issue of fiction vs. nonfiction, there is also the question of genre. The Bayou Trilogy has received excellent reviews, but it is a mystery series. While there is nothing wrong with that per se, not every presidential reading selection is worth revealing to the public. Bill Clinton, for example, used to love mysteries, but he did not advertise the titles of what he once called “my little cheap thrills outlet.” Room is another well-received novel, but it is about a mother and child trapped in an 11-by-11-foot room. This claustrophobic adventure does not strike me as the right choice for someone trying to escape the perception that he is trapped in a White House bubble.
The Grossman novel, which is about an Israeli woman who hikes to avoid hearing bad news about her soldier son, could create complications for Obama on the Israel front. Grossman is a well-known critic of Israeli policy towards the Palestinians, so reading this novel will likely not assuage those concerned about Obama’s views on the Middle East.
While the fiction-heavy aspect of the list is something new, the liberal authors should come as no surprise. Obama, like other Democratic presidents, has tended to read mainly liberal books, although he could stand to gain some insight from conservative ones. There could be many reasons for his selection bias, but buying his books at the “legendary” Bunch of Grapes probably is not helping matters. While I have never had the pleasure of shopping there, the store’s website highlights a variety of its offerings, with nary a conservative work. There may be some on the shelves there somewhere, but they are probably not staring Obama in the face when he visits the store.
According to the results of my completely unscientific survey of Bunch of Grapes’s website, Laura Ingraham’s Of Thee I Zing, Jonah Goldberg’s Liberal Fascism, and Mark Steyn’s After America were listed as available for online ordering. Thomas Friedman’s Hot, Flat, and Crowded, which appeared as an Obama book selection twice, in 2008 and 2009, was listed as “In Stock.” This is not meant as a criticism of the bookseller; Bunch of Grapes is running a business, and they need to cater to the liberal crowd at Martha’s Vineyard in order to bring in customers. At the same time, if Obama wants to diversify his reading selections, Bunch of Grapes may not be the place to go.
This year’s list suggests that Obama needs to consider the messages sent by his reading more carefully. According to Mickey Kaus, the Obama list is “heavy on the wrenching stories of immigrant experiences, something the President already knows quite a bit about.” For this reason, Kaus feels that the list reveals an intellectually incurious president. Either that, or it is “a bit of politicized PR BS designed to help the President out.” In that case, he notes, “it’s sending the wrong message.” Either way, the annual book list should be a relatively easy way to make the president appear to be on top of things and in control. This year’s list, alas, reveals a president who appears to be neither.
Cheered to hear he reads something other than a teleprompter. Are you sure 'Brave New Worlds' isn't his pick (considering the creepy space aliens meme affecting his cohorts)? Suggest he read "Ten things you need to know to be re-elected'. Hasn't been written? Well, refer him to Prager's article on the NRO. The power of ten..
Cutting for Stone, Room, and the Israeli one (I don't even care at this point) are obvious woman's book club favorites already and are likely for the wife.
The non fiction about America, the mystery about Bayous, and the novel about Chicago have got to be the president's.
Right -- and you lefties never, ever analyzed what Reagan, W or Sarah Palin were reading or offered snarky comments about it. I doubt Obama will finish a single one of these books while on vacation -- the man clearly likes to do other things than read in order to relax (golf, television, movies), so that I suspect these books are nothing but playing along with the liberal conceit that "great minds" like his are so voracious that they must absorb at least five thick books while on vacation. In light of Obama's addiction to the teleprompter, and inability to put together an . . . umm . . . ahh . . . coherent sentence without one, has anyone thought to ask whether he purchased the audio version of these books so that he can have them read to, rather than, by him?
This article assumes that he actually reads the books he bought. I know a lot of people who buy books but they sit and collect dust. Have we ever seen him reading? We've seen him swing a golf club. I'd say if he was reading there'd be a photo op of it.
If I were president, especially in such divisive times as these, I'd want to learn more about the opposition. Buying liberal books, novels to boot, is simply preaching to the choir and non-consequential.
This is one of the most stupid, shortsighted and thoughtless essays I've ever read. I am stunned and dismayed by Mr. Troy's attempt to play partisan politics with something as fundamental to our success as a society as reading.
Perhaps Mr. Troy would support a curtailment of the First Amendment so that he can tell us what we should or shouldn't read.
This is one of the most stupid, narrow-minded and thoughtless comments I've seen on NRO.
The point was that the books he chooses gives some insight to Obama's interests. And those interests don't appear to be nonfiction works. You know, books that he can actually learn something from.
How you managed to drag the First Amendment into this is mysterious to rational people.
I don't need to say anything more about the absurdity of this piece after what New York Magazine has already said: External Link
But I would like to point out to Mr. Troy that when Bill Clinton read mysteries, he went out of his way to praise Walter Mosley's talent. But perhaps reading Ms. Ingraham, and Messrs Goldberg and Steyn has affected his ability to think clearly.
Mr Clinton famously praised Michael Connelly too, another worthy mystery writer. Of course, if Mr Troy was good at following facts he'd probably not qualify for an NR position....