The secret literary life of George W. Bush
(Page 2 of 2)
It's an impressive list. I get paid to read and consequently go through many titles a year but I'm still impressed.
Skip to next paragraphRecent posts
-
05.25.12
FC Barcelona stars help to bring e-books to Africa -
05.25.12
How the transit of Venus opened the planet to our forefathers -
05.24.12
'A Confederacy of Dunces' to hit the big screen – with Zach Galifianakis? -
05.23.12
Stephen Colbert's children's book tops the bestseller list -
05.22.12
Teen books: twice as obscene as video games?
However, the revelation of this surprising bent for reading is not earning the president much good press.
"The books themselves reveal — actually, confirm — something about Bush that maybe Rove did not intend," writes Richard Cohen in the San Jose Mercury News. "They are not the reading of a widely read man, but instead the books of a man who seeks — and sees – vindication in every page. Bush has always been the captive of fixed ideas. His books just support that."
In the Atlantic Monthly: "I did that same contest at the local library – when I was six. Anyone who actually reads books knows that reading the words off the page is half the job, at best. The hard part is digesting the book, getting to its essential themes and then weighing them against your own body of knowledge.... Only a rookie would set that sort of goal – and then brag about it. Either that or, you know, someone who doesn't really read."
There are also those who have questioned the numbers and doubted the veracity of Rove's report.
I'm not among them. I have never bought into the anti-intellectual image Bush has cultivated for himself and I have no reason to doubt that he read and enjoyed all of the above titles.
But what does resonate for me is this comment on the reader blog of seattlepi.com: "If Bush and Rove truly wanted to share their passion for reading and love of books they could have been a lot more vocal about it. Think of the online book social network and community building possibilities? Think of all that potential and needed revenue for authors and publishers that could have been had if they would have shared their reading lists with the public."
I'm not so interested in the thought of lost publishing revenues as I am in the status of reading in this country. If the president values books and the pursuit of knowledge in them, that would have been a good thing for young readers to know. Actually, it would have been a good thing for students of all ages to know.
It would have been a good thing for the country to know. And it could only have helped Bush's image.
So I have no problem with Rove's announcement that Bush is a reader. I just wish we had known sooner.



Previous





These comments are not screened before publication. Constructive debate about the above story is welcome, but personal attacks are not. Please do not post comments that are commercial in nature or that violate any copyright[s]. Comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence will be removed. If you find a comment offensive, you may flag it.