Here is a propaganda novel about propaganda. The plot revolves around the premise that the first Gulf War under Bush Sr., was conceived and developed as a war movie, with a big Hollywood producer and a famous film director in charge of the project. The story is packaged as a crime novel, with a Mickey Spillane type character—a masculine, tough, wisecracking covert security agent who becomes romantically linked with a famous and gorgeous actress—whose mission is to retrieve the memo written by a dying Lee Atwater that gave birth to the idea.
The style is witty, the plot has the required complexity and requisite twists and turns, and moreover, is very well written. I enjoyed every minute I spent with this book, savoring it like a delicious snack.
It does have some unusual traits. Third person omniscient narrative is interspersed with the first person of the hero. Also, because the book is sort of 'faction', rather than pure fiction, Beinhart has footnotes at the end of the chapters, which is strange for a novel. Some people might wonder why he didn't write a straight non-fiction book, but for me I thought the concept worked well. So reader be aware, my rating is subjective and you might not appreciate it in the smae way as I did. If you like straight crime drama, you might want to check out his Tony Cassella series, which I intend to read and rate.
(By the way, if you've seen the movie 'Wag the Dog' with Hoffman and DeNiro, it won't spoil the book for you, since, in Beinhart's reply as to whether the movie was faithful to the book, he said yes. 'They only changed the plot and the characters!' Funny coming from him, since he himself wrote the screenplay!)