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Lucky Bastard

di Charles McCarry

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiConversazioni
914297,071 (3.36)Nessuno
Lucky Bastard is the suspenseful and hilarious story of a gifted politician with dangerous friends and a zipper problem. The author is Charles McCarry, a writer widely acclaimed for his richly perceptive novels of political intrigue.            John Fitzgerald Adams, known by the voters who love him as Jack, has good reason to believe he is the illegitimate son of JFK. His goal is the same as that of any Kennedy: to reclaim the presidency . . . and enjoy as many women as possible along the way. Jack possesses an instinctual political genius, an unerring knack for charming voters and advancing his own interests.            But Jack, up from poverty, cannot make it to the Oval Office without money and support. Luckily, he becomes the beneficiary of the largesse of two maverick Russians who recognize Jack's talent and invest considerable resources in his rise to power. Jack also relies on a strong-willed wife, an ardent radical who masterminds his political moves while guarding against the threat that his wild libido will destroy his career. As Jack marches toward the presidency, others who realize the truth about his sinister connections try to stop him. But will anyone believe them?            Charles McCarry has long been recognized as the dean of Washington's novelists, "a magical writer, the very best in this field" (Martha Gellhorn, Sunday Telegraph). With Lucky Bastard, McCarry has written the novel of his career, a thrilling and imaginative vision of power and conspiracy in the age of Clinton.… (altro)
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  Dermot_Butler | Nov 8, 2023 |
Jack Adams, who believes himself the bastard son of Jack Kennedy, is recruited by Soviet agents Dmitri and Dmitri's superior Peter as a sleeper. They plan to assist him to attain the Presidency.
Again McCarry carries off a fascinating espionage tale, which although comic in some sense is outrageously accurate and revealing in its view of recent American political history.
  RonWelton | Jul 26, 2021 |
I only became aware of this author when I read his recent obituary. It portrayed him as prescient, having foretold in fiction an American president who rises to power by colluding with Soviet intelligence. I found the novel to be more prosaic than I would have expected. For one thing it relies greatly on sex in the form of blackmail, infidelity and lust to drive the plot. More importantly the author clearly was oriented towards a conservative, patriotic view of the world.

This is one of those novels where the reader constantly senses with justification a quantum acceleration of plot development is in the offing, then a growing awareness that the pages still unread are dwindling and finally an abrupt ending with a lingering sense that there could have been more to it. ( )
  JoeHamilton | Jul 21, 2020 |
A Clintonesque young man who is a KGB spy becomes President of the US. In retrospect, this feels dated, a product of the stupidly overheated atmosphere around the Clinton Presidency that served as such an effective distraction from the real problems of the world.
  wfzimmerman | May 29, 2007 |
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Lucky Bastard is the suspenseful and hilarious story of a gifted politician with dangerous friends and a zipper problem. The author is Charles McCarry, a writer widely acclaimed for his richly perceptive novels of political intrigue.            John Fitzgerald Adams, known by the voters who love him as Jack, has good reason to believe he is the illegitimate son of JFK. His goal is the same as that of any Kennedy: to reclaim the presidency . . . and enjoy as many women as possible along the way. Jack possesses an instinctual political genius, an unerring knack for charming voters and advancing his own interests.            But Jack, up from poverty, cannot make it to the Oval Office without money and support. Luckily, he becomes the beneficiary of the largesse of two maverick Russians who recognize Jack's talent and invest considerable resources in his rise to power. Jack also relies on a strong-willed wife, an ardent radical who masterminds his political moves while guarding against the threat that his wild libido will destroy his career. As Jack marches toward the presidency, others who realize the truth about his sinister connections try to stop him. But will anyone believe them?            Charles McCarry has long been recognized as the dean of Washington's novelists, "a magical writer, the very best in this field" (Martha Gellhorn, Sunday Telegraph). With Lucky Bastard, McCarry has written the novel of his career, a thrilling and imaginative vision of power and conspiracy in the age of Clinton.

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