Empire

a novel

No cover

Gore Vidal: Empire (1987, Random House)

486 pages

English language

Published Jan. 8, 1987 by Random House.

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4 stars (4 reviews)

Empire is the fourth historical novel in the Narratives of Empire series by Gore Vidal, published in 1987. The novel concerns the fictional newspaper dynasty of half-sibling characters Caroline and Blaise Sanford. Playing these characters against real-life figures of the years 1898 to 1907, the novel portrays the conjunction of government and mass media in the creation of modern-day America. As with Vidal's other books in his Narratives of Empire series, this novel offers an insight into the journalism of the time, following the exploits of William Randolph Hearst in his efforts to displace Theodore Roosevelt as president in 1904. Following the events leading up to and following the ascension of Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency following William McKinley's assassination, it includes pithy portraits of such leading public figures of the day as Roosevelt, Hearst, Henry Brooks Adams, Henry James, Secretary of State John Hay and President William McKinley. In …

23 editions

Review of 'Empire' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I almost put this down several times. Gore Vidal's writing is so pompous. But I have a compulsion to finish things. Also, the period in history is fascinating, even if he is telling it through the elite who created the empire that he supposedly is criticizing. Kind of amazing how short a time it has been since our empire started. And tragic how you could basically tell exactly this story with present day politicians.

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Subjects

  • United States -- History -- 1901-1909 -- Fiction