Description

Book Synopsis
THE GOLDEN AGE is the final, eponymous novel that brings to an end what Gabriel García Márquez has called ''Gore Vidal''s magnificent series of historical novels or novelised histories'', NARRATIVES OF EMPIRE. Like a latter day Anthony Trollope, Vidal masterfully balances the personal with the political, the invented with the historical fact. His heroine from Hollywood, Caroline Sanford, reappears in Washington as President Roosevelt schemes to get the USA into the war by provoking the Japanese. In the novel''s ten year span America is master of the globe, with Japan and Europe as colony and dependency under her empire. Against this backdrop there is a glittering explosion in the arts (we see the likes of Lowell, Bernstein and Tennessee Williams and witness the opening night of A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE). But by 1950 and the coming of the Korean War, the Golden Age is over. For the reader who wants to be informed as well as vastly entertained about the last two hundred years of Am

Trade Review
Vidal's combination of learning, wit and disdain gets into your blood. He can change the way you think * OBSERVER *
This entertaining portrait of an imperial elite may well be, as Vidal intends, the version of US history that survives in the coming decades. * IRISH TIMES *
Crackpot theory has seldom been so suavely and entertainingly put across. * NEW STATESMAN *
Vidal's satiric thrusts are enormous fun. * DAILY TELEGRAPH *
Wonderfully compelling. It is serious and entertaining. It rings diamond-true. It is a novel for grown-ups; and that is something very rare in contemporary fiction * SCOTSMAN *
Brilliantly evokes the decade when the US believed it was the undisputed master of the universe ... imperious, well-informed and wickedly accomplished, it brings American politics to life in a way that few other modern novels can match * DAILY MAIL *
Our greatest living historical novelist * ANTHONY BURGESS *
Iconoclastic, yet never mere satirical caricature, this remarkable novel sequence is a melange of historical demystification ... The bold sweep of Vidal's design continues to enthral, and throughout The Golden Age, as throughout the sequence, he delights in giving the read entree to a heady variety of gatherings ... Vidal's touch in handling these set pieces and portraying the famous remains wonderfully assured * LITERARY REVIEW *
There are still few novelists with the ability to so vividly imagine a scene, and even fewer who so completely understand and write about the nature of power. And anyone who wants to learn about the history of the United States will learn as much from this series of novels [Narratives of Empire] as they will from the history books * SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY *

TheGolden Age by Vidal Gore Author ON Dec062001

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    A Paperback / softback by Gore Vidal

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      View other formats and editions of TheGolden Age by Vidal Gore Author ON Dec062001 by Gore Vidal

      Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
      Publication Date: 06/12/2001
      ISBN13: 9780349114279, 978-0349114279
      ISBN10: 0349114277

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      THE GOLDEN AGE is the final, eponymous novel that brings to an end what Gabriel García Márquez has called ''Gore Vidal''s magnificent series of historical novels or novelised histories'', NARRATIVES OF EMPIRE. Like a latter day Anthony Trollope, Vidal masterfully balances the personal with the political, the invented with the historical fact. His heroine from Hollywood, Caroline Sanford, reappears in Washington as President Roosevelt schemes to get the USA into the war by provoking the Japanese. In the novel''s ten year span America is master of the globe, with Japan and Europe as colony and dependency under her empire. Against this backdrop there is a glittering explosion in the arts (we see the likes of Lowell, Bernstein and Tennessee Williams and witness the opening night of A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE). But by 1950 and the coming of the Korean War, the Golden Age is over. For the reader who wants to be informed as well as vastly entertained about the last two hundred years of Am

      Trade Review
      Vidal's combination of learning, wit and disdain gets into your blood. He can change the way you think * OBSERVER *
      This entertaining portrait of an imperial elite may well be, as Vidal intends, the version of US history that survives in the coming decades. * IRISH TIMES *
      Crackpot theory has seldom been so suavely and entertainingly put across. * NEW STATESMAN *
      Vidal's satiric thrusts are enormous fun. * DAILY TELEGRAPH *
      Wonderfully compelling. It is serious and entertaining. It rings diamond-true. It is a novel for grown-ups; and that is something very rare in contemporary fiction * SCOTSMAN *
      Brilliantly evokes the decade when the US believed it was the undisputed master of the universe ... imperious, well-informed and wickedly accomplished, it brings American politics to life in a way that few other modern novels can match * DAILY MAIL *
      Our greatest living historical novelist * ANTHONY BURGESS *
      Iconoclastic, yet never mere satirical caricature, this remarkable novel sequence is a melange of historical demystification ... The bold sweep of Vidal's design continues to enthral, and throughout The Golden Age, as throughout the sequence, he delights in giving the read entree to a heady variety of gatherings ... Vidal's touch in handling these set pieces and portraying the famous remains wonderfully assured * LITERARY REVIEW *
      There are still few novelists with the ability to so vividly imagine a scene, and even fewer who so completely understand and write about the nature of power. And anyone who wants to learn about the history of the United States will learn as much from this series of novels [Narratives of Empire] as they will from the history books * SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY *

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