Bushworld

Written by:
Maureen Dowd
Narrated by:
Kathe Mazur

Unabridged Audiobook

Ratings
Book
Narrator
Release Date
September 2004
Duration
13 hours 17 minutes
Summary
From Washington to Kennebunkport to Texas to old Europe and new Europe, during the past two decades Maureen Dowd has trained her binoculars on the Bush dynasty, putting them, as both 41 and 43 have complained to her, 'on the couch.' Here she wittily dissects the Oedipal loop-de-loop between father and son and the Orwellian logic of the rush to war in Iraq. It's a turbulent odyssey charting how a Shakespearean cast of regents, courtiers, and neo-con Cabalists-all with their own subterranean agendas-hijack King George II's war on terror and upend the senior Bush's cherished internationalist foreign policy and Persian Gulf coalition.

As she's written about Bushworld, 'It's their reality. We just live and die in it.''

For thirty years, Maureen Dowd has written about Washington-and America-in a voice that is acerbic, passionate, outraged, and incisive. But nothing has engaged her as powerfully as the extraordinary agendas, absurdities, and obsessions of George the Younger. Drawing upon her celebrated columns, with a new introductory essay, she probes the topsy-turvy alternative universe of a group she has made recognizable by their first names, middle initials, nicknames, or numbers-41, the Boy Emperor, Rummy, Condi, Wolfie, Uncle Dick of the Underworld, General Karl, Prince of Darkness (Richard Perle), and her own nickname from W., the Cobra-as they seek an extreme makeover of the country and the world. Bushworld is a book that any reader who cares about the real world won't want to miss.
Reviews
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Mandi Chestler

"I feel pithy, oh so pithy, and witty and gay!" As My Fair Lady of the Op-Ed pages, Maureen Dowd must have warbled this tune as she plucked away at her word processor keys. She certainly comes off jubilant as CD after CD she reaches a shrill fever pitch of criticism of the Bushy bunch. Her humour is wry as ever, and the first half-dozen CD's are certainly entertaining. But 12 CD's of the same old tune made me wish for the abridged version. Obviously Dowd does not indulge in self-editing.

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Michael Scott

Great read, but Kathe Mazur, the narrator, left much to be desired. She made me feel like I was back in school listening to my old mono-tone History professor.

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