Synopsis
Two very different young men--Andrew Sebastian, born to privilege and wealth, and James Brackler, battling his way out of poverty and neglect--become deadly rivals in the high-stakes arena of Washington power politics
Reviews
Two ambitious Texans from opposite ends of the social spectrum become collegiate rivals, then graduate to politics and rekindle their mutal hatred in this entertaining, fast-reading debut. Raised in a miserable family, redneck Jim Brackler studies hard and wins a scholarship to SMU, where he feels humiliated by the confident "golden boys," especially Andrew Sebastian. A rich, charming, handsome football star, Sebastian inadvertently slights the grossly overweight bully, and Brackler responds by raping Sebastian's girlfriend, Tricia Farris. Brackler avenges Sebastian's subsequent beating by defeating him in a congressional run-off 10 years later. Having given up politics and turned to an academic career at SMU, Sebastian is drawn back into the fray when he hears that Brackler is running for the U.S. Senate. But Brackler, ever the dirty pol, manages to smear Sebastian as badly as he did during the first go-round, when he proved that the elder Sebastian had kept his son out of Vietnam by pulling strings. This time, he links Sebastian's affair with a sympathetic lobbyist to his votes while he briefly served in Congress. Although Sebastian is a two-dimensional hero, Allyn portrays the other players, particularly Brackler, with verisimilitude. He also avoids belaboring the grim memory haunting Tricia, and handles political strategems with an expertise not normally manifest in the genre.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Menage a trois takes on an ugly meaning in this dark tale of political competition with a secret rape at its core. For some 25 years, two men and a woman are inextricably bound by fearsome and profound emotions. Two Texans, one a talented scion of wealth, the other a hard-knocks scrabbler, make their careers in Washington, D.C., and are ultimately pitted in a no-holds-barred contest which an assassin's bullet decides. The woman they both adore endures the constant reminder of her terror, with devastating effects on her marriage and career as a political wife. This bare-knuckled rampage through contemporary politics is convincingly detailed, but its emotional resonance suffers from a too facile surprise ending. For the most part, though, the novel roars along with such energy and vigor that any fan of Washington expose fiction will not be disappointed.
- Barbara Conaty, Library of Congress
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.