Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
Gore Vidal. First edition (stated), first printing. Both dust jacket and hardcover in Near Fine condition. In an unclipped dust jacket design by Sheridan Germann. In a mylar protective wrapper. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1967. No writing or markings in this well preserved book, 377 pp.
First edition of the final volume in Vidal's Narratives of Empire, his acclaimed six-volume series of historical novels about the American past.
A novel of power players in American politics from 1937 to 1952, including both fictional and historical characters. It offers an illuminating portrait of our republic from the time of the New Deal to the McCarthy era. Widely regarded as Vidal's ultimate comment on how the American political system degrades those who participate in it, Washington, D.C. is a stunning tale of corruption and diseased ambitions. It traces the fortunes of James Burden Day, a powerful conservative senator who is eyeing the presidency; Clay Overbury, a pragmatic young congressional aide with political aspirations of his own; and Blaise Sanford, a ruthless newspaper tycoon who understands the importance of money and image in modern politics. With characteristic wit and insight, Vidal chronicles life in the nation's capital at a time when these men and others transformed America into "possibly the last empire on earth."
"Washington, D.C. may well be the finest of contemporary novels about the capital, " said The New Yorker, and the Times Literary Supplement deemed it "a prodigiously skilled and clever performance."
This was the author's tenth novel. He published his first at age 19, "Williwaw."