VIDEO: Lynne Cheney Unhinged On CNN
Lynne Cheney repeatedly attacked CNN for having a
liberal bias during a fiery and combative appearance
today on the Situation Room.
http://thinkprogress.org/2006/10/27/lynne-cheney-cnn/
Published on Wednesday, August 11, 2004 by the Los
Angeles Times
Lynne Cheney's Wild, Wild West
by Patt Morrison
SISTERS
Sisters (Paperback) see review:
by Lynne Cheney
" Let us go away together, away from the anger and
imperatives of men. There will be only the two of us,
and we shall linger through long afternoons of sweet
retirement. In the evenings I shall read to you while
you work your cross-stitch in the firelight. And then we
shall go to bed, our bed, my dearest girl."
It's one weird summer when the nation's favorite beach
reading inclines to bestsellers by Bill Clinton, the
9/11 commission, John Dean and Tommy Franks … real
page-turners.
But then there's another book, written by another
well-known political figure, and it's a doozy.
Throughout its pages are fornication (the heroine with
her late sister's husband), incest (half brother knocks
up half sister), adultery (the heroine, with her first
husband's friend), contraception (by the wed and the
unwed) and lesbian couplings (the heroine's sister and
an older woman). And incidentally, lynchings, dogicide,
cattle theft and robber-baronism.
The book was published 23 years ago, before the author's
husband became one of the nation's most influential
politicians, and before the author became a Valkyrie in
the culture wars. And the author is … aha, you thought I
was going to say Hillary Clinton, didn't you?
It's Lynne Cheney, wife of the Republican vice
president. The book is a frontier novel of the 19th
century called "Sisters." It's hot, it's sexy and it's
out of print.
I could find only 11 copies in all of the nation's
public libraries, mostly in red states: four in Wyoming,
Cheney's home state, and one each in North Dakota,
Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Kansas, Virginia,
and Kern County, Calif.
On the Internet, the original 1981 $2.50 Signet
paperback has an asking price of $2,999.95 to $25,000,
the latter more than the cost of a first edition of "The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." I have "Sisters." I
can't reveal my sources, but my hot copy is now in a
secure, undisclosed location. (Thanks, Mom.)
A proposal this spring to reissue the book was deep-sixed
by Cheney, whose lawyer explained it wasn't her best
work. It doesn't show up in her White House website
biography. During the 2000 campaign, she told the New
York Times she hoped the book would start "flying off
the shelves." Now she doesn't want it to fly at all.
What a flip-flopper.
Naturally, demand is in inverse proportion to
availability. In March, the New York Theatre Workshop
staged a performance of choice scenes. The snicker
factor is obvious, with passages like "Let us go away
together, away from the anger and imperatives of men,"
and "Eve and Eve, loving one another" in "a passionate,
loving intimacy." So is the hypocrisy potential, when
both Cheneys and their lesbian younger daughter are
laboring to reelect a man who regards Adam-and-Steve
nuptials as the death knell for civilization.
The book as a whole, though, is even more radical. "This
is a very feminist book," said Elaine Showalter. She's a
Princeton English professor emeritus who ran across
"Sisters" at a Paris bookstall about a dozen years ago
and wrote about it for a scholarly publication. I
reached her on vacation, which I hoped was being
financed by a five-figure sale of that long-ago copy,
but wouldn't you know it — she'd sold it some years ago
for $25.
"I couldn't believe it was Lynne Cheney," Showalter told
me. "At that point she was head of the National
Endowment for the Humanities. I've had many not personal
but institutional dealings with her; she had a
reputation as being pretty tough on women's history and
feminist criticism."
Showalter thought the book did a "wonderful job" of
dramatizing "the role of women in the West … she'd
clearly read [the historical research] and wrote
sympathetically. It's about women breaking away from the
dollhouse and striking out on their own." If Cheney ever
did allow a reprint, Showalter would probably be
delighted to write a jacket blurb.
Cheney, who earned a PhD in literature — that's one of
the liberal arts — set the book in 1886 Wyoming, a rough
paradise where women got the vote in 1869 and used it.
When the territory was invited to become a state in a
nation that barred women from voting, Wyoming thumbed
its nose at Congress — "We may stay out of the Union 100
years, but we will come in with our women" — and kept
state suffrage. The West led the way for women, and
Wyoming led the West. Soon Colorado, Idaho, Utah and
Washington gave women the vote; so, in 1911, did
California.
The cover describes the heroine as "beautiful,
strong-willed," which is book-jacket code for an uppity
woman about to be tamed by some man. Not this time. The
lesbianism, the adultery, the contraception would offend
some Bush voters, but it's the frank, uncensorious
feminism that's really astonishing. Cheney's women do
what has to be done. No divine bolt splits the heavens
to punish lesbians and fornicators. Life happens.
I found myself thinking that, in some ways, Lynne
Cheney's 19th century Wyoming sounds like a better place
for women than George W. Bush's dream for 21st century
America.
In Lynne Cheney's Wyoming, the heroine doesn't feel she
has to be a powerhouse in private and a dimpled simp in
public. "I'm not caught up in that kind of hypocrisy,"
she says. "I've spent my life facing it down."
In Lynne Cheney's Wyoming, the heroine debates with the
governor and drops an opera house chandelier on a man
trying to kill her.
In Lynne Cheney's Wyoming, a woman might even tell a
tormentor to "shove it," and earn a frontier "you go,
girl" for saying so.
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
###
Sisters - A Book By Lynne Cheney - Gay Lesbian
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Lynne Cheney - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Within the George W. Bush administration, Lynne Cheney
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