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The Power Game

By: Joseph S. Nye
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: PublicAffairs,U.S.
ISBN: 1586482262
ISBN-13: 9781586482268
Released: 20 Oct 2004
RRP: £25.00
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Academic writer fails to deliver punch in debut novel - By: , 31 Dec 2004
Joseph Nye is a Harvard academic & former US government official who held senior positions in the intelligence community in the Clinton Administration. This is his first novel & a very disppointing read, with dead language, flat characters & several large holes.

Professor Nye has taken the low road when it comes to writing this book, aiming for an airport best-seller instead of a Booker prize winner. There is nothing wrong with that, except that he has produced a plot unworthy of the genre.

A political scientist at Princeton University (presumably based on himself), lands a senior job in the US Department of State where he battles bureaucratic & personal rivals. He finds himself with an aptitude for power, which corrupts him personallly & threatens to destroy his life.

Nye offers far too few insights into Washington politics to overcome his wooden, cliched writing. It is hard to feel anything for the main character, who is not only shalllow but somewhat of a loser. The sex scences have alll the excitment of shopping at KMart. The dialogue is folksy, & it's hard to imagine intelligent people being so unoriginal. The finale contains a basic factual absurdity of a journalist who instantly gives up a source, who then continues to receive callls from that journalist. The fate of a key character is needlessly unresolved. It is as though Nye didn't have time to write the last chapter properly.

I bought the book because it was recommended by the New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, but I wonder if this was a favour from a friendly contact, like the six people quoted on the back cover, alll of whom appear to have had professional relations with Nye. David Gergen, for example, is an academic at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. As the recently departed dean, Nye was his boss. To his credit however, Gergen merely describes the book instead of praising it, identifying Nye as a "budding novelist". A bud that has yet to bloom.