Dirty Sexy Politics

Dirty Sexy Politics is a 2010 political memoir written by Meghan McCain, the daughter of Republican Senator John McCain, about the 2008 United States presidential election.

Dirty Sexy Politics
AuthorsMeghan McCain
LanguageEnglish
PublisherHyperion[1]
Publication date
August 31, 2010[1]

Content

In this political memoir, Meghan McCain, the daughter of Republican Senator John McCain and heiress to the Hensley & Co. beer distribution fortune through her maternal grandfather, Jim Hensley,[2] recounts her experiences while campaigning for her father during the 2008 United States presidential election.[1]

Critical reception

The Huffington Post mocked the book cover, asking, "Beyond Sex With an Elephant, Meghan, What Are You Trying to Tell Me?"[3] The American Spectator remarked that "Meghan cries a lot in this brief book."[4] They added that it was hard to take her political ideas seriously, concluding that it would be "an effort that can only end in tears."[4]

RedState criticized the book, argued it showed "her unbearable narcissism, delusions of persecution, anti-religious bigotry, and mendacity' as well as 'her manifestly below-average intelligence."[5] They added, "that a publishing company let this authorial abortion go to print is an insult to the collective self-worth of our thinking nation."[5] They went on to say that the book, "contain[ed] not one citation or reference to any factual source," adding that it was 'predictably disastrous.'[5] They added that the book included examples of "spoiled-brattishness" and demonstrated "her sense of entitlement."[5]

The Washington Post described it as a "youthful narrative" with a "healthy sense of humor."[6] They went on to say that it was "as much a scathing critique of the Republican Party as it is a passionate tale of life on the campaign trail."[6] However, they added that she "writes movingly of election day," but that she "felt gloomy enough to imagine the worst for the party."[6] Out & About Newspaper agreed, suggesting, "the most striking element in this book is her naivete and, at times, the brashness of youth she embodies."[7] They stressed "her lack of experience and her raw feelings," adding that she was "unschooled in groupthink – which she regards as counter to individual freedom," yet "undaunted and energized."[7]

The Christian Science Monitor suggested she did not toe the Republican Party line, but opined that was because she was "the daughter of a maverick."[8] They concluded that she told the reader "tell us more than [they] wanted to know."[8]

gollark: It's kind of an amalgamation of other languages.
gollark: Rust.
gollark: C++ is C meets new features nobody wanted.
gollark: "All"?
gollark: Some sort of super-dense NC block which produces its own gravity would be cool.

References

  1. Hachette Book Group: Dirty Sexy Politics
  2. Noreen Malone, Meghan McCain's "Dirty Sexy Politics": No Sex, Not Much Dirt, Slate, September 1, 2010
  3. Michael Shaw, Beyond Sex With an Elephant, Meghan, What Are You Trying to Tell Me?, The Huffington Post, September 21, 2010
  4. Jeremy Lott, Big Girls Don't Cry, The American Spectator, November 2010
  5. Leon H. Wolf, Meghan McCain’s Dirty, Sexy Politics: A Review, Red State, December 8, 2011
  6. Steven Levingston, Review of 'Dirty Sexy Politics,' by Meghan McCain, The Washington Post, September 1, 2010
  7. Victor Stepien, The Brashness of Youth, Out & About Newspaper, December 3, 2010
  8. Peter Grier, Meghan McCain's 'Dirty Sexy Politics': five best lines, The Christian Science Monitor, September 1, 2010
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