NON-FICTION: FEAR AND LOATHING IN THE WHITE HOUSE
Fear: Trump in the White House by Bob Woodward is a shocking look inside the Trump presidency led by a man who says the key to power is fear. “The reality in 2017,” writes Woodward in his prologue, “is that the USA is tethered to the words and actions of an emotionally overwrought, mercurial and unpredictable leader. Members of his staff had joined to purposefully block some of what they believed were the president’s most dangerous impulses. It was a nervous breakdown of the executive power of the most powerful country of the world.”
Fear is an important book not only because it raises serious questions about the American president’s basic fitness for office, but also because of who the author is. Woodward has written or co-authored 18 books — 12 of them number one bestsellers — and won two Pulitzer Prizes and his investigative reporting with Carl Bernstein led to former president Richard Nixon’s resignation in 1974.
Recently there has been an avalanche of books revealing how irresponsible, amoral and erratic the current American president is. To name a few, there is Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House by Michael Wolff which depended almost totally on interviews with one source, namely Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon; Unhinged: An Insider’s Account of the Trump White House by Omarosa Manigault Newman, a disgruntled former employee who now has an axe to grind; former FBI director James Comey’s book A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies and Leadership, which is extremely well-written but the result of a political vendetta; House of Trump, House of Putin: The Untold Story of Donald Trump and the Russian Mafia by Craig Unger, which smacks of excessive speculations; and The Assault on Intelligence: American National Security in an Age of Lies by Michael Hayden, again a brilliant book, but written by an ex-NSA director who is in the crosshairs of Trump.
Bob Woodward’s latest bestseller, already in its 10th reprint since its release on September 11, has broken a number of publishing records. What it tells us about US President Donald Trump’s administration, however, is not pretty
On the other hand, in this era of “alternative facts” and corrosive tweets about “fake news”, Woodward is truth’s gold standard; he is not a partisan and his information comes primarily from multiple deep background interviews with first-hand sources which Woodward doggedly taped for the record.
What further distinguishes Fear from other publications is the process by which Woodward writes his books. “My job is not to take sides,” he says. “I think our job is not to love or loathe people we’re trying to explain and understand. It is to tell exactly what people have done, what it might mean, what drives them and who they are.”
Jeff Shesol, an American reviewer and speechwriter for former president Bill Clinton, in writing about Woodward’s book The Price of Politics, described the author’s style as the “literary equivalent of C-SPAN3.” The authority of relentless matter-of-fact reporting, utterly denuded of opinion, gives Woodward’s latest book its credibility. Some of my Pakistani-American friends have expressed the opinion that Fear is a boring book, almost like a documentary, but obviously that is the key to Woodward’s way of reporting the truth; he gives you news not views. It is just plain and simple reporting.
“Why do you think there was a nervous breakdown in the White House?” asked CNN’s Anderson Cooper, to which Woodward replied, “Because there was a nervous breakdown.” When Judy Woodruff of PBS NewsHour asked, “Based on your book where every other page has something jaw-dropping, do you think the president is fit for governing the United States?” Woodward replied, “That is not for me to judge. My goal in this book is to try to understand this person, what kind of president he is, who is advising him and ultimately what this means for the country.” When Fareed Zakaria of CNN questioned him about using anonymous sources, Woodward replied that they were not anonymous to him and if they knew he were to reveal their names, they would have given him only a press release version of the truth.
Woodward’s 18 books in his 47 years as a journalist have covered, among other subjects, eight former US presidents. According to him, what is unprecedented about the Trump White House is the post-truth world in which it exists. What is chilling in this respect is that to President Trump, a lie or a truth are the same. He has the uncanny ability to say diametrically opposite things in the same sentence and deem both of them true, so long as they serve his purpose. That is an ominous development and the pathology of that is frightening.