Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Vidal, Gore (Vol. 142) - Marvin J. LaHood (review date Winter 2000)


Vidal, Gore (Vol. 142) - Marvin J. LaHood (review date Winter 2000)

Marvin J. LaHood (review date Winter 2000)

SOURCE: A review of The Smithsonian Institution, in World Literature Today, Vol. 74, No. 1, Winter, 2000, p. 174.

[In the following review, LaHood offers an unfavorable assessment of The Smithsonian Institution.]

Gore Vidal has just about done it all: twenty-three novels, a book of short stories, five plays, nine collections of essays, and Palimpsest: A Memoir. So what could he possibly imagine for his latest novel? Why not drop a thirteen-year-old boy genius, named T., into the Smithsonian Institution, where he meets just about everyone in America’s past, exhibitions come to life, Lindbergh takes him for a ride (within the building) in The Spirit of St Louis, he is seduced by Mrs. Grover Cleveland in the guise of a twenty-two-year-old white maiden held captive by the Iroquois, and past presidents get a chance to explain some of their decisions.

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