The last election A novel

Andrew Yang, 1975-

Book - 2023

"The story focuses on two characters: Mikey Ricci, a political operative who has lost faith in traditional structures following the bitter races of 2016 and 2020; and Martha Kass, the anonymous tip supervisor of the New York Times. In 2023, Ricci becomes the campaign manager of a third-party candidate who runs on a popular, centrist platform and whose frank and honest manner stands in stark contrast to the candidates of the two major parties. Ricci faces off against the massive machinery of both political parties, as well as their invested media and dark money supporters--the source of true power in America. Even so, the candidate's message begins to gain ground. In the meantime, Kass stumbles upon a plot by the current Joint Chie...fs of Staff to seize power in the anticipated chaos of the coming election. She hopes it is too improbable to be taken seriously. But as the idea that Ricci's candidate might win enough electors to upset the delicate balance of America's two-party system takes hold, the threat becomes frighteningly real. Events unfold at the frenetic pace of the campaign trail, and Kass and Ricci become unlikely allies as they bear witness to what might be the end of America as a democratic republic. If no candidate can accrue the coveted majority of 270 electors, who wins? The electoral system collapses in uncertainty as Congress's role in certification becomes unfathomably complex. When no one is certain who the winner is, the stage is set for a corrupt seizure of power. Will the American experiment end?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Political fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
Brooklyn, New York : Akashic Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Andrew Yang, 1975- (author)
Other Authors
Stephen Marche (author)
Physical Description
255 pages : map ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781636141497
9781636141503
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Former Democratic presidential candidate Yang (The War on Normal People) teams up with novelist Marche (The Hunger of the Wolf) to craft a frighteningly plausible "what-if" scenario in this taut political thriller. Billionaire and Maverick Party presidential candidate Cooper Sherman is running on a platform that emphasizes universal basic income and ranked-choice voting. But as his insurgent campaign gains momentum, the entire system of American governance may be under threat: an anonymous source has shared audio on a New York Times tip line suggesting that high-ranking military leaders are planning a coup. The conspirators believe that the next presidential election could lead to chaos, with the Republican candidate winning an electoral college victory despite losing the popular vote by millions, and only the armed forces can avert bedlam. As Times reporter Martha Kass fights to get her editors to publish the story, and Cooper's campaign manager, Mikey, wrestles with his boss's potential complicity in the ensuing disorder, Yang and Marche masterfully ratchet the tension to near-unbearable levels. The outcome, in this worthy 21st-century update of the 1962 classic Seven Days in May, is just possible enough to give readers nightmares. Agents: (for Yang) David Larabell, CAA; (for Marche) P.J. Mark, Janklow, Nesbit & Assoc. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In former presidential candidate Yang's first novel, doomsday looms for American democracy in the months leading up to the 2024 election. No one is safe in America anymore. The latest victims of violence include a female Supreme Court justice shot to death in Washington, D.C., and a Democratic state senator gunned down in Michigan. At the Republican convention in Milwaukee, fighting between anarchists and the Proud Boys leaves three dead and 17 wounded. The only hope for turning things around is underdog third-party candidate Cooper Sherman, a charismatic, straight-talking billionaire running on the "Unfuck America" ticket. Never mind those sex clubs he once frequented. "Scandal is no longer a barrier to a candidate's success," according to his campaign manager, Mikey Ricci. "It's a requirement." And with the Joint Chiefs of Staff poised to seize power in the increasingly likely event that the election goes off the rails, there are graver concerns than a candidate's peccadilloes. Not that evidence of the secret plot will be reported in the New York Times. "They'll find reasons not to run it," thinks the tip-line supervisor who discovered evidence of the plot. Though the novel has the markings of satire, details--including candidates hiring "selfie consultants" and Kim Kardashian conferring with Matthew McConaughey about his "gun-responsibility social media strategy"--are too believable to laugh at. Yang says Marche "did the heavy lifting writing this novel" and that the "stories and recollections" of Zach Graumann, Yang's campaign manager, "form the backbone of this book." While their collective contributions don't cut very deep, their zinging broadsides make for lively and unsettling reading. A corrosive work of speculative fiction that may put readers even more on edge than they already are. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.