Milton Public Library

Party like a president, true tales of inebriation, lechery, and mischief from the Oval Office

Label
Party like a president, true tales of inebriation, lechery, and mischief from the Oval Office
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Party like a president
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Sub title
true tales of inebriation, lechery, and mischief from the Oval Office
Summary
There's the office: President of the United States. And then there's the man in the office-prone to temptation and looking to unwind after a long day running the country. Celebrating the decidedly less distinguished side of the nation's leaders, humor writer Brian Abrams offers a compelling, hilarious, and true American history on the rocks-a Washington-to-Obama, vice-by-vice chronicle of how the presidents like to party. From explicit love letters to slurred speeches to nude swims at Bing Crosby's house, reputations are ruined and secrets bared. George Washington brokered the end of the? American Revolution over glasses of Madeira. Ulysses S. Grant rarely drew a sober breath when he was leading the North to victory. And it wasn't all liquor. Some presidents preferred their drugs-Nixon was a pill-popper. And others chased women instead-both ?the professorial Woodrow Wilson (who signed his love letters "Tiger") and the good ol' boy Bill Clinton, though neither could hold a candle to Kennedy, who also received the infamous Dr. Feelgood's "vitamin" injections of pure amphetamine. Illustrated throughout with infographics (James Garfield's attempts at circumnavigating the temperance movement), comic strips (George Bush Sr.'s infamous televised vomiting incident), caricatures, and fake archival documents, the book has the smart, funny feel of Mad magazine meets The Colbert Report. Plus, it includes recipes for 44 cocktails inspired by each chapter's partier-in-chief. Brian Abrams is the author of AND NOW . . . An Oral History of "Late Night with David Letterman," 1982-1993. He has written for High Times, Mental Floss, Playboy, and other publications. He lives in New York City. John Mathias is an artist, illustrator, and graphic designer whose work has appeared in The Washington Post, The New York Times, Seventeen, Tablet Magazine, The Lowbrow Reader and others. He lives in Long Branch, New Jersey
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

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