Obliviously On He Sails: The Bush Administration in Rhyme

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Random House Publishing Group, Dec 18, 2007 - Humor - 128 pages
BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Calvin Trillin's Quite Enough of Calvin Trillin.

Does the Bush Administration sound any better in rhyme? In this biting array of verse, it at least sounds funnier. Calvin Trillin employs everything from a Gilbert and Sullivan style, for describing George Bush’s rescue in the South Carolina primary by the Christian Right (“I am, when all is said and done, a Robertson Republican”), to a bilingual approach, when commenting on the President’s casual acknowledgment, after months of trying to persuade the nation otherwise, that there was never any evidence of Iraqi involvement in 9/11: “The Web may say, or maybe Lexis-Nexis / If chutzpa is a word they use in Texas.”

Trillin deals not only with George W. Bush but with the people around him—Supreme Commander Karl Rove and Condoleezza (Mushroom Cloud) Rice and Nanny Dick Cheney (“One mystery I’ve tried to disentangle: / Why Cheney’s head is always at an angle . . .”) The armchair warriors Trillin refers to as the Sissy Hawk Brigade are celebrated in such poems as “Richard Perle: Whose Fault Is He?” and “A Sissy Hawk Cheer” (“All-out war is still our druthers— / Fiercely fought, and fought by others.”).

Trillin may never be poet laureate—certainly not while George W. Bush is in office—but his wit and his political insight produce what has been called “doggerel for the ages.”
 

Selected pages

Contents

Jesus and Mammon Team Up to See George W Bush Through the Primaries
9
The JesusMammon Team Triumphs Thanks to a LastMinute FivePointer by the Supreme Court
23
The Supporting Cast Enters from Stage Right
29
Big Shots on Crime Spree Billions Looted Few Arrests Made
41
Lobbyists Heiresses and Others in Need of Compassion
49
Just Invade Something
59
Assorted Irrelevant Countries
67
The Charge of the Sissy Hawk Brigade
77
The Crooked Path to War
85
Where Have All the Weapons Gone?
97
Republican Nation Building
107
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Since 1990, CALVIN TRILLIN has been The Nation’s “deadline poet,” contributing every week a piece of verse on the news. In discussing his political sympathies, he has said, “I am partial to politicians with iambic names that rhyme with a lot of disparaging words.”

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