President of the United States Donald Vanderdamp is having a hell of a time getting his nominees appointed to the Supreme Court. After one nominee is rejected for insufficiently appreciating
To Kill A Mockingbird, the president chooses someone so beloved by voters that the Senate won't have the guts to reject her -- Judge Pepper Cartwright, the star of the nation's most popular reality show,
Courtroom Six.
Will Pepper, a straight-talking Texan, survive a confirmation battle in the Senate? Will becoming one of the most powerful women in the world ruin her love life? And even if she can make it to the Supreme Court, how will she get along with her eight highly skeptical colleagues, including a floundering Chief Justice who, after legalizing gay marriage, learns that his wife has left him for another woman.
Soon, Pepper finds herself in the middle of a constitutional crisis, a presidential reelection campaign that the president is determined to lose, and oral arguments of a romantic nature.
Supreme Courtship is another classic Christopher Buckley comedy about the Washington institutions most deserving of ridicule.
Author: Christopher Buckley
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Twelve
Published: 09/07/2009
Pages: 304
Weight: 0.57lbs
Size: 7.96h x 5.32w x 0.84d
ISBN: 9780446697989
Review Citation(s): New York Times Book Review 10/25/2009 pg. 24
About the AuthorChristopher Buckley was born in New York City in 1952. He was educated at Portsmouth Abbey, worked on a Norwegian tramp freighter and graduated cum laude from Yale. At age 24 he was managing editor of Esquire magazine; at 29, chief speechwriter to the Vice President of the United States, George H.W. Bush. He was the founding editor of
Forbes FYI magazine (now
ForbesLife), where he is now editor-at-large.
He is the author of fifteen books, which have translated into sixteen languages. They include:
Steaming To Bamboola, The White House Mess, Wet Work, God Is My Broker, Little Green Men, No Way To Treat a First Lady, Florence of Arabia, Boomsday, Supreme Courtship, Losing Mum And Pup: A Memoir and
Thank You For Smoking, which was made into a movie in 2005. Most have been named
New York Times Notable Books of the Year.
He has written for the
New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, the
New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, Time, Newsweek, Vanity Fair, National Geographic, New York Magazine, the
Washington Monthly, Forbes, Esquire, Vogue, Daily Beast, and other publications.
He received the Washington Irving Prize for Literary Excellence and the Thurber Prize for American Humor. He lives in Connecticut.