วันพุธที่ 4 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: Eighteen Acres

If you are curious in reading a unique novel by an author who has great comprehension into the setting where she places her fictional characters, I believe you will enjoy "Eighteen Acres" by Nicolle Wallace.

Ms. Wallace has been a political commentator and analyst, communications director and campaign counselor to the presidential level. Because of this, she has been able to write a plot that is very detailed and very realistic.

Book

One of the main characters of this story is Charlotte Kramer who is the first female president of the United States. Her White House chief of staff, Melanie Kingston and one of the key political reporters, Dale Smith, are also females in responsible positions. All three share loyalty to their work as well as difficulties in managing their personal relationships. In fact, problems that they have in trying to balance personal and work affects and harms each of them in dissimilar ways.

A urgency occurs when President Kramer and Dale Smith head to Afghanistan where a serious charge is made on them. The ensue of this is that a amount of secrets from their personal lives become known to the world. They are faced with drastic changes not only in their careers but also in their personal lives. Relationships that otherwise had seemed to be solid are jeopardized and the media is scrambling to cover all the details for the public. This affects popularity polls in a way that might not otherwise have occurred.

Eighteen acres is the actual size of the area on which the White House involved sits. It is therefore also an apt title for this book which focusses on staff who work and spend most of their waking hours dealing with White House issues.

The author lays out her tale in a very animated but easy-to-understand manner. The chapters are short but each of them provides an foremost key to developing the broad plot. Her thirteen years of touch in politics is obvious as she weaves details of protocol and scheduling in with the very real aspects of house life that each of the characters experiences. And, of course, it would not be as animated a story if it were not for the inclusion of the corrupting sway that can accompany power.

I verily enjoyed this book. It is an easy read that provides comprehension into what might happen in a White House of the future but, at the same time, incorporates past and present politics so that the whole thing is entirely believable.

Book Review: Eighteen Acres

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