In his first novel, celebrated humorist Roy Blount Jr. chronicles the life and times of America’s first-ever First Husband
Guy Fox first encountered Clementine on the campus of Dingler College. She was running, stark naked, away from an on-campus protest and the police who were pursuing her. Guy and Clementine’s romance wound through turbulent social movements of the ’60s and ’70s, all the way to Clementine’s ascension to the Oval Office. As the nation’s very first First Husband, Guy is privy to the surreal intricacies of presidential life, and he sets out to write a light and thoroughly uncontroversial memoir about his relationship with Clementine. But the First Hubby can’t help but let some of his more mischievous qualities slip through into his book . . .
The thoroughly charming First Hubby is an engrossing novel about politics, family, and the art of marriage, even amid the most unusual of circumstances.
Roy Blount Jr. is the author of twenty-three books. The first, About Three Bricks Shy of a Load, was expanded into About Three Bricks Shy . . . and the Load Filled Up. It is often called one of the best sports books of all time. His subsequent works have taken on a range of subjects, from Duck Soup, to Robert E. Lee, to what cats are thinking, to how to savor New Orleans, to what it’s like being married to the first woman president of the United States.
Blount is a panelist on NPR’s Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me!, an ex-president of the Authors Guild, a usage consultant for the American Heritage Dictionary, a New York Public Library Literary Lion, and a member of both the Fellowship of Southern Writers and the band the Rock Bottom Remainders.
In 2009, Blount received the University of North Carolina’s Thomas Wolfe Prize. The university cited “his voracious appetite for the way words sound and for what they really mean.” Time places Blount “in the tradition of the great curmudgeons like H. L. Mencken and W. C. Fields.” Norman Mailer has said, “Page for page, Roy Blount is as funny as anyone I’ve read in a long time.” Garrison Keillor told the Paris Review, “Blount is the best. He can be literate, uncouth, and soulful all in one sentence.”
Blount’s essays, articles, stories, and verses have appeared in over one hundred and fifty publications, including the New Yorker, the New York Times, Esquire, the Atlantic, Sports Illustrated, the Oxford American, and Garden & Gun. He comes from Decatur, Georgia, and lives in western Massachusetts.
FIRST HUBBY by Roy Blount, Jr, is about a married couple, Guy Fox and his wife Clementine. Guy is a writer and stay-at-home dad. Clementine is a socially and politically active woman. They met while in college and their first meeting as the book opens is probably the funniest part of the book. As years go by, Clementine becomes an actual politician and elected official, becoming Vice President of the United States. When the president dies in a freak fishing accident, actually killed by a fish (!), she succeeds to the presidency and Guy becomes the First Hubby of the first female president. The book is mostly about his attempts to understand and either fulfill or avoid the expectations of his role, and his unhappiness and unwillingness to meet them, all told with humorous and interesting details. Roy Blount, the author of 23 books, winner of numerous awards and prizes, is both humorist and curmudgeon, as well as a frequent panelist on NPR's Wait Wait.....Don't Tell Me program. In FIRST HUBBY Blount often makes use of an almost stream-of-consciousness style, but always within the moment of the story. It's an enjoyable read, not difficult, and often thought-provoking.
First Hubby is an interesting and entertaining look at life as the first US first husband. Guy Fox is a writer, stay-at- home dad and spouse to a politically astute woman. When she first becomes vice president, and then president through very unusual circumstances, Guy is thrown into his role, totally unprepared and unaware of what is expected of him. This book will make you laugh and keep you smiling as you continue on your day.