Review by Kirkus Book Review
Lithgow continues his poetic skewering of "a POTUS whose pants are routinely on fire." In this clever follow-up to Dumpty: The Age of Trump in Verse (2019), the actor and author unleashes more razor-sharp satirical wit, lampooning the second half of "our distractible," Twitter-obsessed chief's presidential term. Lithgow begins with the impeachment in late 2019 and moves through the litany of lies and blunders that have formed the Trump administration's teetering foundation. Beyond the primary target, the author also draws farcical caricatures of fumbling politicos like senior advisers and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani ("filled with rage and babbling bluster, / 'America's Mayor' has lost his luster"). Lithgow renders Mitch McConnell as a manipulative, suffocatingly partisan reptile: "By keeping his party in line and tight-knitted, / The Tortoise prevailed and got Dumpty acquitted / But by treating the trial as a legal blood sport, / He rendered the Senate a kangaroo court." Political strategist and a man Lithgow calls the "dirty trickster, artful dodger," Roger Stone gets a full-page poem and makes good company with another Trump blunder: "substituting his Sharpie for science" after mistracking Hurricane Dorian. The cover art and interior line drawings provide suitable graphic accompaniment to the text. As with the first volume, this one is a short, succinct, laugh-out-loud affair, and no one in the Trump administration is above Lithgow's eagle-eyed scrutiny. Unwilling to leave even readers with limited political knowledge behind, the author also includes brief profiles of the politicians that he eviscerates. All the snarky novelty doesn't reveal anything new nor untrue; rather, Lithgow whisks the obvious into a creatively brilliant distraction that most readers will enjoy. Even loyal Trumpers may find a stray chuckle for the ridiculousness and the current administration's political circus. A hilarious and pertinent parody to help pass the time until the November election decides the nation's fate. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.