Lieutenant Governor Mack of Oklahoma gets a fluke chance at the vice presidential nomination when he stands in for his ailing boss, addresses the Democratic National Convention, and receives resounding acclaim that places him on the Short List. (General Fiction).
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Anecdotal in style, political in nature, Short List tells the amusing, political tale of "One-eyed Mack," the Oklahoma Lt. Governor who had his 15 minutes of fame during the 1976 Democratic convention. Lehrer's mid-Western twang and easy delivery complement this enjoyable story about the vice-presidential "short list." He provides sufficient voices for local color and diversity. In addition, the mixing of real politicians and commentators with fictional characters allows the listener to feel privy to some underlying truths. The only real flaw is presentational: the tapes have neither introduction nor any tape-turning notices. L.(H.)B. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
The One-Eyed Mack, the naive, open-eyed Oklahoma Lt. Governor (Lost and Found, p. 70, etc.) who explains that he and his wife Jackie, the drive-thru supermarket queen, ate dinner at ``Michelangelo's, a linen-tablecloth Italian restaurant named after an artist,'' recounts the feverish two days in 1976 when fate and David Brinkley tossed him onto the short list for the US vice-presidency. Holed up in a New York convention hotel with Sooner Gov. Buffalo Joe Hayman, Mack thinks his biggest headaches will be overpriced room- service meals and Buffalo Joe's dogged memorization of his keynote speech. Wrong: Joe suffers a stroke en route to the convention floor; Mack delivers the speech himself--tacking on a plea for anyone knowing the location of the 70-years-mummified body of George E. Stone (who claimed to be the escaped John Wilkes Booth) to get in touch with the Oklahoma Historical Society--and the country goes wild. (Brinkley: ``The country could do with a national candidate with a search for a mummy as a priority.'') Though the presidential candidate and his snakelike handlers are delighted to find that Mack has no views on any national issues, his skeletons--his gift of five '57 Ford Fairlanes from tainted oilman Cal Blackwell, his teenaged sexual encounter with a hooker, his shady motives for moving to Oklahoma in the first place, and a climactic allegation of plagiarism--burst from their closets with lightning speed (``ONE-EYED MUMMY-LOVING VEEP SHORT-LISTER ADMITS BUS SEX, PARDON SCHEME, SLOBBERS, PICKS NOSE!'' Mack imagines the headlines reporting his news conference). If this bright, affectionate tale peters out toward the end, well, let it go as a reminder that political scandal can still be great fun. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Ex-library copy with stickers and stamps to the spin, the top of the front cover and first page. Otherwise a clean, unmarked copy. Large Print Edition. Seller Inventory # 002418
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Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Large Print edition. Pictorial boards. 301 pages. No dust jacket, as issued. Signed by the author. A clean copy with little wear. "Lieutenant Governor Mack of Oklahoma gets a fluke chance at the vice presidential nomination when he stands in for his ailing boss, addresses the Democratic National Convention, and receives resounding acclaim that places him on the Short List.". Seller Inventory # 007254
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