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For other authors named Frank Rich, see the disambiguation page.

10+ Works 1,139 Members 17 Reviews

About the Author

Frank Rich served from 1980 to 1993 as the chief drama critic for The New York Times and since 1994 has been an op-ed columnist at the paper. He lives in New York City with his wife, the writer Alex Witchel. (Bowker Author Biography)

Works by Frank Rich

Associated Works

Fixed Ideas: America Since 9.11 (2003) — Preface — 165 copies, 2 reviews
Everything Was Possible: The Birth of the Musical Follies (2003) — Foreword, some editions — 150 copies, 2 reviews
Know the Past, Find the Future: The New York Public Library at 100 (2011) — Contributor — 132 copies, 4 reviews
Falsettos (1993) — Afterword — 84 copies, 2 reviews
The Best American Magazine Writing 2013 (2013) — Contributor — 44 copies
The Best American Political Writing 2002 (2002) — Contributor — 27 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1949-06-02
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

17 reviews
This book is subtitled "The Decline and Fall of Truth From 9/11 to Katrina" and is a point by point explanation of each and every time the Bush administration has lied to us in order to further its agenda at the expense of the American people. It's not new news, but it may be one of the first times the timeline of manipulation has been laid out so clearly and effectively. Reading it made me sick to my stomach. I know that history shows us this isn't the first time our elected leaders have show more proven unethical, but that this particular administration is blatantly so, and expects us to follow along with its wishes like lambs to the slaughter, makes my blood boil.

The best bit in this book comes in the epilogue and reads as follows:

...the Bush presidency could well prove, as its most severe critics have maintained, the worst ever. Its legacy will include the destruction of America's image, credibility, and prestige abroad; record budget deficits produced by unchecked spending and tax cuts; an abused and broken military; a subversion of the Constitution achieved by rigidly ideological judicial appointments, the abridgment of civil liberties, and outright lawbreaking in the White House; an indifference to environmental imperatives, including the energy conservation urgently needed to end America's chronic economic dependence on the congenitally unstable Middle East; and the promotion of America's homegrown religious fundamentalism with both official and political assaults on medical and earth science (including evolution) and the rights of gay Americans. (And that's just the short list.)

Well said, Mr. Rich, well said.
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To say that the Grumpy Vegan is a fan of author and New York Times columnist Frank Rich is to understate it. His Sunday column was a must-read -- indeed, the only reason to buy the paper -- until, well, NYT decided to hide it only to paying subscribers in its Times Select boutique. The toes curled, the wry grin smiled and the brain was amused and stimulated by Frank's satirical writing style. That's why all summer I waited patiently for his Greatest Story Ever Sold.

What could be more show more delicious than an entire book of biting commentary on politics inflamed by a scathing critique of mainstream culture? Greatest Story is a must-read. But it is written in a writing style unlike his columns.

Frank describes how Bush et al took us to war with Iraq. The twist in his narrative is that this is a story of how an administration packaged and marketed the war while it was saying one thing but secretly knew the truth was something else. For example,

"That cynical priority was what had dictated the timing of the rollout of the product in the first place: it wasn't a mushroom cloud that imminent as the White House pressed for a congressional resolution in the fall of 2002, it was the midterms."

And, again,

"Reeling from the criticism, Bush pleaded to ABC's Diane Sawyer that people not "play politics during this period of time." But just months earlier the president had flown from Crawford to Washington overnight to sign a symbolic bill intervening in the case of Terri Schiavo, a brain-dead hospice patient flogged as a right-to-life cause by the Christian right. He was in no position now to lecture anyone about playing politics with tragedy."

To say that I wished I could write like Frank Rich -- specially in the style of his NYT columns -- is to understate it.
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I really only picked up the book because I'm such a fan of his columns. One thing I really appreciate about him is that he can contextualize all of the events with other stuff that was in the public consciousness at the time, so when you smack your forehead and say, "How did we let them get away with that?" you can also beat yourself up over the sheer stupidity of what was front page news coverage.

I saw Frank Rich speak last night in a venue that is very much a San Francisco institution. show more The format is a "conversation", in which someone with appropriate context for the speaker (in this instance, Steven Winn, an arts & culture critic for the SF Chronicle) engages the speaker in conversation for about an hour and then there are about 20 - 30 minutes of audience questions, direct from the audience members who are handed microphones without any prior screening.

I also had read Rich's book over the weekend and of course have read his columns intermittently for some years.

Rich is great. Nothing is sacred. He's as critical of the Dems as he is of the GOP. As far as I can see, the only person or institution that gets his full approval is Seymour Hersh (who is indeed a kind of God among men). I had a sense that he would be a good speaker, because his writing (both in his book and in his column) is very engaging and almost conversational, but he exceeded my expectations.

Someone in the audience asked him about whether we need to change the system, given that it has been completely railroaded by one man and his agenda, and Rich was like, you know, the system is good, but you can't abdicate power. He cited the number of Congresspeople who had actually read the National Intelligence Estimate prior to the vote in late 02 about going to war against Iraq, and it's like 6 or 8.

And then someone said, well, you say that the nation was unduly credulous and you also talk about the amalgamation of news with entertainment networks/companies, but isn't it really the Chomskyan reality that it's just the venality of corporations that we're facing here? And Rich was like, you can't oversimplify it like that. Halliburton did horrible things and they have profited greatly from the war, but they didn't start it. And the NY Times and the Washington Post are not owned by corporations -- they're family dynasty newspapers -- and yet they too dropped the ball. So you can't just say, oh bad corporations, and think you've made sense.

I really really appreciate him. I strongly recommend his book, which is a fair accounting of what was known when and by whom, what was told to the American public, and how and when the news organizations and Congress failed in their responsibility to question the Bush Administration on our behalf. But don't expect the Dems to get off lightly here. Nuh uh.

Again, one of Rich's strengths is his understanding of popular culture and how it feeds into politics. So he constantly offsets the political with the cultural and gives a very broad picture of what we were watching when we weren't watching Bush.
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½
thoughtful, nuanced story of a young man who developed his passion for theatre early, his ear for dialogue instantly, ... and the ability to capture details and the wonder of a quiet and exciting theatrical life.

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Popularity
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Rating
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Reviews
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ISBNs
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