The Seduction of Hillary Rodham
The Seduction of Hillary Rodham is a 1996 book about the early years of Hillary Rodham Clinton written by once-conservative writer, later-liberal media watch dog and Clintons supporter David Brock. The book was written during the advent of Brock's political evolution, thus contains a mixed ideological viewpoint.
Background
After the commercial and received-ideological success of The Real Anita Hill, Brock's first book, The Free Press paid Brock a large advance to write a book about Hillary Rodham Clinton. That amount has been stated as $1 million by Brock in his 2002 memoir Blinded by the Right.In that volume, Brock claimed that he was pushed into the book assignment by what his publisher and agent wanted, but in any case, the clear expectation was that it would be a takedown in the style of his writings on Anita Hill and Bill Clinton. To fulfill this goal, Brock hired what he has termed a "small brigade of researchers" to assist him.
The turn
The project, however, took a different turn, and the resulting book, The Seduction of Hillary Rodham, proved to be largely sympathetic to Hillary Clinton, causing surprise within the publishing industry. Having received the large advance and a tight one-year deadline from Simon & Schuster's then-conservatively focused Free Press subsidiary, Brock was under tremendous pressure to produce another bestseller. However, the book contained no major scoops. In Blinded by the Right, Brock said that he had reached a turning point; he had thoroughly examined charges against the Clintons, could not find any evidence of wrongdoing, and did not want to make any more misleading claims.Content
The titles of the chapters of the book illustrate some of its themes:- Hillary for President
- A Seminar for Radicals
- Love and Squalor
- Stranger in a Strange Land
- Alinsky's Daughter
- The Real Comeback Kid
- Joan of Arkansas
- Wifewater?
- Partners for Life
- Damage Control
- Rodham Rides Again
- Charge of the Light Brigade
- The Revenge of the Ozarks
Critical reaction
When the book came out, it was widely criticized for not breaking any new ground. The Los Angeles Times called it "xhaustive to the point of exhaustion" and "predictably critical, but unexpectedly measured, at least in comparison to what Beltway gossips anticipated." James B. Stewart for The New York Times said that Brock had "tried to do his subject justice in the broadest sense", but added that "t times he goes too far," often "echo her apologists" and "dismiss or rationaliz the sometimes powerful evidence that Hillary Rodham Clinton has lied...by invoking a relativism rooted in Republican precedents."Entertainment Weekly gave the book a 'D' and said, "What could have actually been a rather poignant biography of a fascinating woman is marred by Brock's heavy reliance on previously published accounts, his leaden prose, the constant sense that he's proselytizing against Bill Clinton, and his naïveté about marriages in general and presidential ones in particular." Writing for the New York Review of Books, Garry Wills assayed that Brock's goal was to establish a premise of a President Clinton becoming into a state of being out of control with unrestrained power going into his second term in office.
Brock said that his former friends in right-wing politics shunned him because Seduction did not adequately attack the Clintons. Jonah Goldberg of National Review proposed another theory: Since "no liberal source in the world would talk to Brock," he could not collect the kind of information he was after. Goldberg also maintained that while writing the book, Brock had been "seduced" by Sidney Blumenthal, a prominent champion and friend of the Clinton circle. Blumenthal would remain the subject of intense attention from anti-Clintonites two decades later.
Sales
Free Press had a first printing of 300,000 copies of the book, which per The Washington Post represented three times the sales of Brock's commercially successful job on Anita Hill.Instead, The Seduction of Hillary Rodham sold very poorly; the Post characterized it as "a disaster". To illustrate, the paper reported that a Washington bookstore had only sold eight out of 30 ordered copies and a Baltimore bookstore only three out of 50. Brock has said the book sold less than half of what the Anita Hill book had, which given the Post' estimate would mean Seduction sold less than 50,000 copies.
Considering the large printing, large advance, and far-under-expectations sales, Brock has said that the book was in the fact of the matter a "commercial disaster".