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Primary Colors (novel)

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
January 16, 1996

ISBN
  
0-679-44859-4 (hc)

Author
  
Joe Klein

Genre
  
Political fiction

3.6/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
366 (hc)

Originally published
  
16 January 1996

Page count
  
366 (hc)

Publisher
  
Random House

Primary Colors (novel) t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSmwCWIF1OMPuDX0Y

Media type
  
Hardcover and Paperback

Characters
  
Governor Jack Stanton, Richard Jemmons, Susan Stanton, Henry Burton, Daisy Green, Howard Ferguson

Similar
  
Joe Klein books, Political fiction books, President books

Primary Colors: A Novel of Politics is a roman à clef, a work of fiction that actually describes real life characters and events – namely, Bill Clinton's first presidential campaign in 1992. It has been compared to two other novels about American politics: Robert Penn Warren's All the King's Men (1946) and O: A Presidential Novel (2011).

Contents

The book was originally published by an anonymous author, who was later found to be columnist Joe Klein. Klein completed a sequel of sorts, The Running Mate in 2000, focusing on the Primary Colors character of Charlie Martin.

Unmasking of "Anonymous"

An early reviewer opined that the author wished to remain unknown because "Anonymity makes truthfulness much easier". Later commentators called the publishing of the book under an anonymous identity an effective marketing strategy that produced more publicity for the book, and thus more sales, without calling into question the author's actual inside knowledge.

Several people, including former Clinton speechwriter David Kusnet, believed the style of writing had similarities to that of Klein. This was also supported by a quantitative stylometric analysis of the book by Vassar professor Donald Foster. Klein initially denied writing the book and publicly condemned Foster. Klein denied authorship again in Newsweek, speculating that another writer wrote it. Washington Post Style editor David von Drehle, in an interview, asked Klein if he was willing to stake his journalistic credibility on his denial, to which Klein agreed.

On July 17, 1996, after The Washington Post published the results of a handwriting analysis of notes made on an early manuscript of the book, Klein finally admitted that he was "Anonymous".

Plot summary

The book begins as an idealistic former congressional worker, Henry Burton, joins the presidential campaign of Southern governor Jack Stanton, a thinly disguised stand-in for Bill Clinton. The plot then follows the primary election calendar beginning in New Hampshire where Stanton's affair with Cashmere, his wife's hairdresser, and his participation in a Vietnam War era protest come to light and threaten to derail his presidential prospects. In Florida, Stanton revives his campaign by disingenuously portraying his Democratic opponent as insufficiently pro-Israel and as a weak supporter of Social Security. Burton becomes increasingly disillusioned with Stanton, who is a policy wonk who talks too long, eats too much and is overly flirtatious toward women. Stanton is also revealed to be insincere in his beliefs, saying whatever will help him to win. Matters finally come to a head, and Burton is forced to choose between idealism and realism.

Reviews

The New York Daily News described the book as a farce and praised it as funny, truthful, and as containing "uncannily accurate" portraits of its thinly disguised characters.

Fictional characters and believed real-life inspirations

  • Jack Stanton, southern governor – (Bill Clinton)
  • Susan Stanton, his wife – (Hillary Clinton)
  • Henry Burton, campaign manager – (George Stephanopoulos)
  • Richard Jemmons, campaign strategist – (James Carville)
  • Daisy Green, campaign media adviser – (Mandy Grunwald and/or Dee Dee Myers)
  • Howard Ferguson, III, campaign chief – (Harold Ickes, Jr.)
  • Orlando Ozio, New York governor – (Mario Cuomo)
  • Jimmy Ozio, his son – (Andrew Cuomo)
  • Charlie Martin, U.S. senator – (Bob Kerrey)
  • Lawrence Harris, former senator – (Paul Tsongas)
  • Bart Nilson, U.S. senator – Tom Harkin
  • Freddy Picker, former Florida Governor – (Jerry Brown) / (Reubin Askew) / (Harold Hughes) / (Ross Perot)
  • Richmond Rucker, NYC Mayor – (David Dinkins)
  • Luther Charles, minister – (Jesse Jackson)
  • Cashmere McLeod, suspected lover of Jack Stanton – (Gennifer Flowers)
  • Lucille Kauffman, adviser to Susan Stanton – (Susan Thomases)
  • Libby Holden (campaign chief of staff) – (Betsey Wright/ Vince Foster)
  • The War Room, a documentary of Clinton's 1992 campaign.
  • References

    Primary Colors (novel) Wikipedia