The Golden Age
 

The Golden Age

by Gore Vidal

Since 1967, when he published Washington, D.C., Gore Vidal has been assembling an artful, acidic history of the United States. The Golden Age represents the seventh and final installment of this national epic, covering the years from 1939 to 1954 (with a valedictory fast-forward, in its final pages, to the end of the millennium). As Vidal did in the earlier books, the author sticks pretty... (read more)

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Member Reviews

  • Tinky
    2 of 2 members found this review helpful.
    • Rated 3 stars

    Disappointing final (or penultimate, depending on how you're counting) volume in Gore Vidal's absorbing American Empire series of historical fiction. What should have been one of the most relevant and riveting installments, dealing as it does with the FDR administration, World War Two and other major 20th century events, seems a muddled, sketchily told early draft. The elderly Vidal's focus and powers seem to be waning here, and it all seems a bit perfunctory. Still, if you've read the rest of the series, it's obligatory. And the rapier wit is still sharp.

    Tinky wrote this review Saturday, April 19 2008. ( reply | permalink )
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