Customer Reviews for Memories of the Ford Administration

Memories of the Ford Administration by John Updike

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Book Reviews of Memories of the Ford Administration

Book Review: Updike's Best -- According to a long-time fan.
Summary: 5 Stars

I have read at least twenty of his novels, and seemingly hundreds of his short stories. 'Ford' is, I believe, his best, his best-represented, and yes, his most pessimistic novel to date (I haven't read the latest 'Bech' book yet). It is this book that accounts Updike's personal hatred for humanity, and will possibly leave the reader shopping for a handgun with a removeable mouthpiece. I regret that such fine writing from such a wordster's hand could be so sad, but alas, this is far from a perfect world.

Book Review: Personal and Public History
Summary: 4 Stars

"Memories of the Ford Administration" (1992) is the fifteenth novel of John Updike, a prolific American writer. It is the third of Updike's novels I have read, spaced widely over the years, with the other two being "Roger's Version", which predated this book, and "In the Beauty of the Lillies", which followed it. I had similar reactions to all three books. Updike deals with important and large themes, such as the possiblity and nature of a belief in God in a skeptical age, the character and promise of American life and history, and, of course, the nature of human sexuality.

There are interesting things in the books by Updike that I have read. But they are all highly uneven with long, dull and wordy sections. Worse,the books have each seemed to me glib in a way that detracts from the importance of their themes. They are more in the nature of literary performances than thoughtful explorations of their subject matters. I have thought about the three Updike books I have read, and was engaged while I was reading them. But I still came away dissatisfied.

"Memories of the Ford Administration" begins when, in 1992, a historical organization called the Northern New England Association of American Historians asks Professor Alfred Clayton (named after Alf Landon, the 1936 Republican Presidential candidate) to provide "requested memories and impressions of he presidential Administration of Gerald R. Ford (1974-1977)." Clayton is a professor at a small women's 2-year college in New Hampshire during the Ford years. By 1992, the college is a four-year institution and has gone co-ed.

In response to the request Clayton produces instead a long, rambling, draft-like monologue which is the text of this novel. It consists, in roughly alternating sections, of a discussion of Clayton's personal life during the Ford years, and of a long unfinished manuscript of Clayton's involving the life and administration of President James Buchanan. Buchanan was the fifteenth President, just before Lincoln, and the only bachelor President.

One can understand the befuddlement and the irritation with which the Northern New England Association of American Historians would have greeted Clayton's response. The trouble is, as far as the novel is concerned, that their response is justified and that the reader of the novel is entitled to the same response and more. There are interesting things in Clayton's ruminations on his life and good discussions in the manuscript on Buchanan. There is little on President Ford's administration and, from a novelistic standpoint, far too little in tying the Ford administration together in some insightful way with Clayton's life or with the Buchanan administration. Updike tries to do this I think, but in an overly clever manner. That is why the book is more a "performance" than it should be and ultimately doesn't succeed.

Clayton remembers the Ford years as a time of widespread sexual openness and promiscuity. The novel focuses on his sexual liasions and primarily on his lengthy audulterous affair with a woman named Genevieve, the wife of a colleague at the University, whom he fantasizes to be the "ideal wife." Genevieve and Clayton abandon their families, including young children, to pursue their affair, with deleterious and unhappy consequences. Neither has the will to get a divorce and to marry the other.

Twentieth century writers of every variety show great interest in sex and in the human libido. I think it is a product of the englightment, with the attendant skepticism toward revealed religion, that took place centuries ago, not, of course, in the Ford Administration. Even writers and individuals who have remained committed to organized religion have tended, for the most part, to accept at least some of this product of enlightenment thought. I found it useful to remember this in considering the book's treatment of sexuality.

The Buchanan portion of the book focuses on Buchanan's romance with a young woman during his early career as a lawyer, the termination of the romance due to what appears to be a misunderstanding, and the subsequent early death of Buchanan's beloved. There are good scenes in the book describing Buchanan's subsequent relationships with President Andrew Jackson and the novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne. The final days of Buchanan's administration, the prologue to our Civil War, are described in a revealing, if slapdash, way.

There is a focus on the elusive character of historical understanding -- which is good and well-taken. The book seems to suggest the impossiblilty of achieving anything even approximating historical truth which seems to me tendentious and unsupported.

One theme that comes through, I think, is the value of restraint of our tendencies to be overly-critical of our national leaders, of American culture, and of ourselves. This is easier to do when events are separated from us by historical time, as is the case with President Buchanan, than is the case with our contemporaries, such as President Ford. There is also the broad theme of forgiveness running through the book. I found President Ford's pardon of former President Nixon hovering in the backround of this novel, even though it is little discussed. Thus, to the extent the book deals with the Ford Administration at all, what it has to say is thoughtful and humane. President Ford is praised for doing his best, for keeping the Nation's interests at heart, and for acting in a responsible manner. (see, e.g. p.354, p.366) Professor Clayton learns, I think, in the course of his ruminations, to work towards a sense of forgiveness and understanding of his own life, including its disappointments and failings. I think this too is a message of the book, but I find it obscured by a good deal of false bravado, obscurity, and unnecessarily showy writing.

There is good material in this book and it stimulates reflection. Thus I think the book will reward reading in spite of the reservations about its specific tone, style, and substance that I have expressed.


Book Review: Brilliant, But Ineffectual
Summary: 4 Stars

My title is not meant to refer to the merits (or lack thereof) of this book, but instead its rather odd tale of two men: The narrator, and his historical subject President James Buchanan. President Gerald Ford, whose administration is referenced in the book's title, comes in for only the very briefest (if glowing) mention. That little joke helps set one up for the series of cruel gags that history plays on President Buchanan--and on the narrator.

In essence, both men are stymied from rising to the considerable central challenge that is thrust upon them (the lead-up to the Civil War in Buchanan's case, a romance with a married woman--"The Perfect Wife"--in the narrator's) by their fundamental ineffectiveness. This wishy-washy behavior drove the nation crazy under Buchanan's leadership, and it drives The Perfect Wife crazy as she is lackadaisically wooed by lackluster academic Alf Clayton over the entire course of the Ford administration. Her name is Genevieve, she is married to a fellow professor and they both have children to raise, but Clayton typically finds a way to blame the affair on the loose sexual morality (really more of a Sixties hangover) prevalent during the Ford years.

President Buchanan, in his admiration for the Southern gentleman and a muddled sense of the limits of states' rights under the Constitution, does not realize until it is too late that his conciliatory tone and overstudied sense of what is necessary for national union has brought the United States to the brink of its bloodiest conflict (Buchanan's successor, Abraham Lincoln, was made of sterner stuff and knew before he assumed office what had to be done). We first glimpse this fundamental inability to step up to the plate in Buchanan's young manhood,. when the (probable) suicide of his deeply disturbed fiancee plunges Buchanan into a dark fog from which he never really emerges--leaving the reader wondering why he was so enamored of the conniving, manipulative Ann Coleman in the first place. Buchanan would remain a bachelor for the rest of his life.

Asked to provide his memories of the Ford administration by an obscure association of New England historians, stunted would-be biographer Clayton inexplicably uses the occasion to finally complete his magnum opus on James Buchanan--the lack of publication of which has effectively shut down Clayton's academic career. And the reminiscences on the Ford years promised to the august historians would certainly have caused dropped jaws and discomfort, even at this late date; most of what Clayton recalls of Ford's term in office is excruciatingly detailed trysts with The Perfect Wife. As was mentioned previously, the actual presidency of Gerald R. Ford is reduced to one paragraph toward the end of the book. One assumes that this is not exactly what the publisher had in mind, rather like a child who enthusiastically describes pulling the wings off flies when asked what he did on his summer vacation.

One wonders if what has drawn Clayton to Buchanan is their shared disingenuousness. Buchanan, in throwing friendly sops to the Southern gentry he so admires (perhaps because he himself was a dirt-poor son of the Pennsylvania coal regions), effectively ignites the greatest conflagration in American history. And Clayton, with his shielded academic's sense of entitlement--there is a horrific chapter in which Clayton waxes euphoric about nubile young collegians as part of the spoils of war due a tenured professor like himself--doesn't see any harm in bedding the mother of one of his students. This is the event that marks the demise of his years-long affair with The Perfect Wife, after their respective families have been rent asunder and divorces filed. Professor Clayton seems genuinely puzzled that his paramour is angry with him when he fails to seduce the student but instead goes after her mature mother.

In the end, both men are reduced to a wheedling, needless pride over their signature achievements: Buchanan by managing to avoid firing the first shot in a Civil War that had been coming to a boil throughout his adminstration, Clayton in getting his long-suffering wife (the "Queen of Disorder") to take him back after his years-long dalliance with Genevieve.

I found the saddest paragraph in the book to be the brief summary of the achievements of Gerald Ford. The President who stepped in for the disgraced Richard Nixon (and then pardoned him to save a national nightmare of hair-pulling and recrimination) was everything that both James Buchanan and Alf Clayton never would be: Decent, confident, down-to-earth, self-deprecating, a faithful husband and father; a man adept at placing others' interests above his own.

Alf Clayton admires President Ford, and he doesn't quite know why. One has the feeling that President Buchanan would have felt the same way.

Book Review: Life In Terms of Terms ( 4-year, that is)
Summary: 4 Stars

Interesting for a person to think of their life's events organized around Presidential Administrations, but that what a historian would do, isn't it? While a book only for the patient reader, Updike is once again brilliantly original and captivating in his language throughout a long thesis split between the mediocre accomplishments of President James Buchanan and similar accomplishments of a 1970's man trying, during a professorial career, to finish a biography about the subject. The narrative is specifically centered around specific years told in "Retrospect" in which he was separated from his wife, enjoying many sexual escapades appropriately, in this promiscuous era. The most potent theme is the idea of history as being often what is remembered or preserved by chance, and often not what actually occurred, absolute truth being the greatest unknown. The flipside to this is that the sense of flimsy narration delivers a plot that doesn't ever arrive at any major event for the fictional protagonist( Buchanan does,of course, has the Civil War looming near), which might annoy some readers. The "writer-as-reflected-in-his-writing" theme is also present, though our protagonist's prose is unmistakably Updike-this is not John Irving in that regard. However, neither of the novel's themes are hammered into the reader except these honest accounts and transcriptions, and it feels completely real, if not particularly profound. Bonus points for being a fun history lesson.

Book Review: Mixed feelings.
Summary: 4 Stars

On the one hand, the novel is filled with utterly believeable characters and wonderfully depicts the mid-1970s ('74, '75, and '76 is when I was 11, 12, and 13 and a story set in that time period immediately appeals to me). But on the other hand, the main character Alf Clayton doesn't really enjoy his life. He has an outwardly rich sexual life but he doesn't really enjoy it, and that's depressive. This happens in real life but it's still depressive. The sexiest part of the book is when Alf's student Jennifer Arthrop visits him in his off-campus apartment. Nothing physical happens, but the scene is filled with delicious erotic tension. (In a way, the scene might be sexier because nothing physical happens.)
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