From Publishers Weekly
Strother was one of the first modern political consultants: he started driving Louisiana candidates and eventually specialized in precisely crafted radio and TV ads. His memoir is filled with wild and woolly stories in which bordello-owning sheriffs and country music bands are a regular fixture on the campaign trail. It also delves into the highly successful period in the early 1980s when a run of victorious Democratic senatorial campaigns culminated in Strother joining Gary Hart's frenetic, and doomed, 1984 presidential run. (There's also a suggestion that he might have prevented the Donna Rice incident.) He gave James Carville one of his first political jobs and crossed paths several times with Dick Morris, whose significance as a consultant he admits despite his conviction that the man represents "everything that has gone wrong with American politics." Bill Clinton also comes under fire; Strother accuses him of "adding my body to those he climbed over to reach the White House" by using his services for several Arkansas campaigns, then dumping him for flashier competitors. The accusation is typical of the book's unblinkered view; after publishing a thinly disguised roman
clef, Cottonwood, in the 1990s, Strother holds nothing back this time. He gives full vent to his anger over prejudice against his Southern background, his disgust with the corruption of Louisiana politics and his "Darwinist, ferocious" approach to his profession. Although Strother's political prestige would be enough to guarantee his memoir's importance, his unflinching recollections raise the book to a even higher level of significance. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Strother, a self-described redneck and political hack, has an interesting tale to tell, which he does in a hail-fellow-well-met tone probably acquired on the campaign trail. His first political bruisings came in notoriously corrupt Louisiana, where he hung out his shingle as a political consultant in the 1960s, before anyone really knew what that meant. Strother winged it, advising both unknowns and A-list candidates, including Gary Hart and Bill Clinton. He is such a raconteur that even the travails of the lesser lights make fascinating reading, but it is when he trots out the big guns--for example, the story about the time Bill Clinton beat up Dick Morris--that readers will sit up and take notice. The last few chapters offer a world-weary assessment of what has gone wrong with political campaigns. This consultant says the blame falls in part on . . . well, consultants, but that mostly it is the candidates (both Clinton and Bush take criticism) who are at fault for placing winning above principle. Somehow he proves it was not always thus. Ilene Cooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Book Description
This brash and rollicking autobiography is a potent primer of the rough-and-tumble world of political consulting by one of its founding fathers and preeminent experts. A cross between a patriotic redneck raconteur and a TV-savvy renaissance man, Raymond D. Strother is unafraid to name names and refuses to mince words in tales of what he calls "the beauty and gore" of American politics. From the crash course in Louisiana politics and corruption he received following graduate school to his compelling entry into the big-time senatorial and congressional races of the 1970s and early 1980s and his adventures with candidates Clinton, Gore, and Hart and famous consultants Dick Morris and James Carville, Strother offers a wildly entertaining, controversial, but finally optimistic political and media success story that will thrill and inspire anyone spellbound by American politics.
About the Author
Raymond D. Strother is president of Strother, Duffy, Strother and lives in Washington, D.C., and in Montana. He is a former president of the American Association of Political Consultants, a former fellow at the John F. Kennedy Institute of Politics at Harvard University, the recipient of a 2001 Pollie Award for Best Political Television, and the author of the political novel Cottonwood.
Falling Up: How a Redneck Helped Invent Political Consulting (politics@media Series) FROM THE PUBLISHER
This brash and rollicking autobiography is a potent primer of the rough-and-tumble world of political consulting by one of its founding fathers and preeminent experts. A cross between a patriotic redneck raconteur and a TV-savvy renaissance man, Raymond D. Strother is unafraid to name names and refuses to mince words in tales of what he calls "the beauty and gore" of American politics. From the crash course in Louisiana politics and corruption he received following graduate school to his compelling entry into the big-time senatorial and congressional races of the 1970s and early 1980s and his adventures with candidates Clinton, Gore, and Hart and famous consultants Dick Morris and James Carville, Strother offers a wildly entertaining, controversial, but finally optimistic political and media success story that will thrill and inspire anyone spellbound by American politics.
Author Bio: Raymond D. Strother is president of Strother, Duffy, Strother and lives in Washington, D.C., and in Montana. He is a former president of the American Association of Political Consultants, a former fellow at the John F. Kennedy Institute of Politics at Harvard University, the recipient of a 2001 Pollie Award for Best Political Television, and the author of the political novel Cottonwood.