From the award-winning author The New York Times Book Review
called "a national treasure," a fascinating, wholly original book about
Pat Nixon that is also "a fully realized account of fiction, fiction
writing, and the fiction writer" (The Boston Globe).
The rare First Lady who did not write a book, Pat Nixon remains one of
the most mysterious and enigmatic public figures in recent history. Ann
Beattie, like many of her generation, dismissed Richard Nixon's wife.
Decades later, she wonders what it must have been like to be married to
such a spectacularly ambitious and catastrophically self-destructive
man.
Beattie uses the elusive persona of Mrs. Nixon to examine how writers
create characters, how they use detail, and what drives their
storytelling. Like Stephen King's On Writing, this fascinating and
intimate account offers readers a rare glimpse into the imagination of a
writer.
A startlingly compelling and revelatory work, Mrs. Nixon is an
insightful and humorous examination of the First Couple who occupied the
White House as the baby boomers came of age.