The White House Novels
Thursday, November 02, 2017
And you left with
the interpreter, noting two straggly kings parked outside the bedroom in simple
camp chairs. Your trip to the White House Began to take on the auras of an
uncomfortable dream. The ceilings over you were cracked, the chandeliers were
filthy, the rugs had bold wounds in them, as if tigers prowled the floor. But
not one soldier on the stairs to guard “Brother Frank” from insurrection. Any
lunatic could visit the President of the United States. All you had to do was get past the sailor with
the eyebrows. Were those really kings in the hall? They looked unsavory to the brigadier
[Polish]. What would he write to his people? He’d been to Brother Franklin’s
home. The White House appeared to be under a murky spell. He wondered if the
rest of America was one monstrous hallucination conceived by FDR to dupe Polish
brigadiers? Franklin Roosevelt was like
a seedy wizard in his bed. He shook hands with you, laughed, offered you
peanuts, told you a riddle, fondled his dog [Fela], but what could you say
about him? The smile, the pince-nez, the cigarette holder, the young sailor,
the lumpy robe, they were all conundrums. The brigadier nodded to the canon on
the lawn. He got out of Roosevelt’s city with the sense of having been spooked
by a sailor, a dog, and a President who
wore a magical robe to bed.
Prologue – The Wizard in Bed –The Franklin Scare – Jerome
Charyn – 1977
You might wonder how Jerome Charyn could possibly write a
novel in which a retired New York City Police Commissioner, Isaac Sidel, becomes mayor of NY
and then ultimately in a fictitious 80s becomes a gun toting (a Glock)
President of the United States. And as Charyn writes in Winter Warning (2017)
Sidel is the US’s first Yid head of state. And to do that there with biting detail Chartyn describes a White House very much like our present one..
But the fact that nestled into those almost 40 novels and
about 19 nonfiction books, there are two that I am now going to baptize as the
White House Novels. They will add up to three with the just released Winter Warning.
The above quote involves a young sailor, Seaman Oliver
Beebe who starts as Franklin Roosevelt’s barber and ends up being a sort of
Abdul to Franklin’s Victoria . There are many detailed accounts in the Franklin
Scare of the goings on in the White House.
In Charyn’s I Am Abraham (a first person account ) novel
there are further details on another White House in the time of War.
I would venture to say that with the Trump White House
being the mess it is Charyn had a great time telling us how President Isaac
Sidel is ignored by his staff, keeps dropping his Glock on the carpet and is haunted
by Abraham Lincoln.
My blogs on Jerome Charyn
My blogs on Jerome Charyn
A stinking voyeur in the house of the dead
Winter Warning
The Vampire of Paris
Blue Eyes
Vanesa
Glock-Verb- Transitive
The Czar's Daughter
Currer Bell
And Zero at the Bone
The Dark Lady From Belorusse
I Am Abraham
I Am Abraham - which one?
Teddy's Desk
Malamud
Charyn & J. Robert Janes
Jane Jacobs & Jerome Charyn
Marilyn the Wild
Dee
The Dark Lady from Belorusse
Margaret Tolstoy
Princess Hannah
Bitter Bronx
Seducing a Cockroach
The Electric Dark of the King Cole
The Little Duchess
Wolf Dogs in Central Park
The Polish Rider at the Frick
Dee- Eddie Carmel
Tanya's Legs
The Colt
Flicked Away a Tear
Laurencia Riley
With Lines from Emily Dickinson
Without the power to die
Emily Dickinson's White Dress
Winter Warning
The Vampire of Paris
Blue Eyes
Vanesa
Glock-Verb- Transitive
The Czar's Daughter
Currer Bell
And Zero at the Bone
The Dark Lady From Belorusse
I Am Abraham
I Am Abraham - which one?
Teddy's Desk
Malamud
Charyn & J. Robert Janes
Jane Jacobs & Jerome Charyn
Marilyn the Wild
Dee
The Dark Lady from Belorusse
Margaret Tolstoy
Princess Hannah
Bitter Bronx
Seducing a Cockroach
The Electric Dark of the King Cole
The Little Duchess
Wolf Dogs in Central Park
The Polish Rider at the Frick
Dee- Eddie Carmel
Tanya's Legs
The Colt
Flicked Away a Tear
Laurencia Riley
With Lines from Emily Dickinson
Without the power to die
Emily Dickinson's White Dress