Further Reading
- Adams, Phoebe-Lou, "Review of Steaming to Bamboola," Atlantic Monthly 249, no. 5 (May 1982): 106. (Adams assesses the strengths of Steaming to Bamboola.)
- Aeppel, Timothy, "Tripping on a Tramp Steamer," Christian Science Monitor (7 July 1982): 17. (Aeppel commends Buckley's descriptive passages in Steaming to Bamboola.)
- Blood, Amos, "Review of Thank You for Smoking," American Spectator 27, no. 10 (October 1994): 77-8. (Blood applauds Thank You for Smoking, calling the novel a credible satire of the American government and political hypocrisy.)
- Campbell, Don G., "Review of Wet Work," Los Angeles Times Book Review (24 February 1991): 6. (Campbell praises the characterization in Wet Work.)
- Hiaasen, Carl, "Front Man for the Tobacco Lobby," Business and Society Review, no. 90 (summer 1994): 63-4. (Hiaasen lauds Buckley's balance of irony, comedy, and realism in Thank You for Smoking.)
- Maslin, Janet, "Two Books Looking for Laughs," New York Times Book Review (14 October 2002): E1. (Maslin lauds the “clever, gleeful” satire in No Way to Treat a First Lady, praising the comic wit, fast pace, and skillful lampooning of the American judicial system and the media.)
- McElwaine, Sandra, "Dry—With a Twist," Washington Monthly 29, no. 6 (June 1997): 52-3. (McElwaine highlights passages from Wry Martinis.)
- Meacham, Jon, "Capital Follies," Washington Monthly 31, no. 3 (March 1999): 55. (Meacham commends Buckley's satirical skills and creative storytelling in Little Green Men.)
- Murray, Alan, "Review of Thank You for Smoking," Washington Monthly 27, no. 6 (June 1994): 58-9. (Murray praises the satirical elements of Thank You for Smoking, noting the importance of the novel's underlying message of reform.)
- Norman, Geoffrey, "Review of Steaming to Bamboola," American Spectator 15, no. 7 (July 1982): 32-3. (Norman gives high accolades to Steaming to Bamboola, complimenting Buckley's descriptive and characterization abilities.)
- Pitt, David, "Plucked in Space," Skeptic 7, no. 3 (summer 1999): 92. (Pitt examines the various characters in Little Green Men, noting that the novel is expertly crafted, witty, and provocative.)
- Remnick, David, "Potomac Pulp," New Republic 195, no. 3743 (13 October 1986): 42. (Remnick contends that Buckley's political lampooning is too polite in The White House Mess.)
- Rubin, Martin, "The Strange Life Forms of the Planet Washington," Insight on the News 15, no. 18 (17 May 1999): 36. (Rubin applauds Buckley's satirical skill in Little Green Men, highlighting Buckley's characterization and eye for details.)
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