Age and Guile Beat Youth, Innocence, and a Bad Haircut (O'Rourke, P. J.) By P. J. O'Rourke
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press 1996 | 368 Pages | ISBN: 0871136538 | PDF | 2 MB
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press 1996 | 368 Pages | ISBN: 0871136538 | PDF | 2 MB
A provocative, conservative satirist shares his strange and twisted days as editor in chief of National Lampoon, his numerous essays on the pleasures and perils of driving, and a look at appropriate sports for middle-aged Republicans. Reprint. 100,000 first printing. $100,000 ad/promo.
Readers can be excused for a little motion sickness when reading this collection of pieces from P.J. O'Rourke. To go from preaching "Armed Love" (whatever that is) to being anointed as the ultra-libertarian Cato Institute's favorite humorist in only 25 years is an astounding transformation.
Still, whether it's New Left juvenilia or high-octane auto journalism scrawled in the Age of Cocaine, one thing holds true: O'Rourke writes one hell of a sentence. Here's P.J.'s impression of Nixon explaining Vietnam to a bunch of hippies: "To be really out front, I get off on ego trips, power games. But, like that's where I'm at … I mean you can put me down for kicking your ass but don't put me down for being an ass-kicker 'cause that's my movie." Then fast-forward 17 years: "Sure, everyone says the Sixties were fun. Down at the American Legion hall, everybody says World War II was fun, if you talk to them after 10:00 p.m." Age and Guile is fun, whatever time it is.