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Sifting for substance in Scott Brown's memoir

The Naked Senator
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  February 23, 2011

Scott Brown
BARING HIS SOUL Brown's memoir uses his childhood to avoid talking about who he is now. 
Brown's memoir, Against All Odds, tells the inspiring rags-to-riches tale of how one can rise from terrible circumstances to great power and influence, with just a little hard work, perseverance, supermodel good looks and world-class athletic ability.

This is surely an important and inspirational story for all the other young Richard Gere look-alikes captaining their school sports teams while struggling to maintain hope. And it makes for lighter reading than the pompous, calculated posturings of most political auto-hagiographies.

But it doesn't get us any further into understanding Scott Brown, career politician — and that is surely not by accident. As brave as it may be for Brown to reveal the hard details of his early life, doing so allows him to get away with disclosing nothing of his adult years — or his ideology.

Brown, a Republican who needs conservatives nationwide to fund his upcoming re-election bid, must appeal to moderate and Democratic voters for that victory. Since his election a year ago, he has tried to thread that needle with careful votes and comments — and, mostly, by avoiding any discussion of his actual opinions on the issues.

How to maintain that political blank slate when writing his life story — and through the press interviews in the promotional book tour? Brown and his political team (whom he thanks for reviewing and commenting on the manuscript) managed it by telling us everything about Brown as a boy and young adult, and nothing about him as a grown man — particularly during his nearly two decades in elected office.

Brown's six years as a state representative, for example, are covered in a single paragraph. His six as state senator get little more. Not that there is all that much to tell — to be fair, not much can be expected from a Republican in the Democratic-dominated Massachusetts legislature — but he could have shared his thoughts on his votes against same-sex marriage and for landmark environmental laws, to take just two examples.

By contrast, the book lingers over every detail of his pre-political life, no matter how personal, painful, or trivial. They include the already famous gripping accounts of sexual assaults he suffered, as well as numerous tales of his physically and emotionally abusive stepfathers. There are lengthy descriptions of his surroundings, his sports achievements (including, at times, game-by-game accounts), his resentments, his clothes, his neighbors, the roads he biked on, the landmarks of Route 1, his shoplifting escapades, the Cosmo photo shoot (which gets far more space than his entire 12-year stint on Beacon Hill), Studio 54 parties, his National Guard training, his daughters' births, and his wife's post-partum depression.

At times it seems like an unfiltered memory-dump. We learn that he lost his virginity in junior high school, to an 18-year-old babysitting his sister. He explains his methods for stealing records and food. We watch him learning to read the horse-racing form; encountering coke-snorting celebrities in New York; hooking up with a sexy French-Canadian woman in Jamaica; waking up from a blackout in a woman's apartment; and, in a memorable Guard sky-jumping vignette, having a bag filled with his own vomit explode all over him.

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Related: Coakley for Senate, How Brown won, Does Scott Brown’s victory mean doom for RI Democrats?, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , Massachusetts, Politics, Books,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
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  •   SIFTING FOR SUBSTANCE IN SCOTT BROWN'S MEMOIR  |  February 23, 2011
    Brown's memoir, Against All Odds , tells the inspiring rags-to-riches tale of how one can rise from terrible circumstances to great power and influence, with just a little hard work, perseverance, supermodel good looks and world-class athletic ability.
  •   MITT REWRITES HIMSELF  |  February 11, 2011
    When Mitt Romney's second book, No Apology , came out a year ago, it looked like he was moving away from the far-right demagoguery of his 2008 bid for the presidency, and toward a more moderate centrism for the 2012 election cycle. But times change, and so does Mitt.
  •   THE GOP'S TOP DOG? IT'S T-PAW, NOT MITT.  |  February 05, 2011
    Whatever the reason, the field of Republican presidential candidates is failing to form, just a year away now Iowa and New Hampshire voting in the nation's first presidential caucus and primary.
  •   STRANGE BEDFELLOWS: THE RIGHT AND LEFT TEAM UP ON CRIMINAL-JUSTICE REFORM  |  January 26, 2011
    The practical result of the new spirit of political civility is still an open question, but there is one area where small-government conservatives and do-gooder liberals might really be moving toward significant policy agreement, compromise, and action: criminal-justice reform.
  •   DESERT STORM: HOW THE GOP AND THE SUNSET STATE NURTURE THE LUNATIC FRINGE  |  January 12, 2011
    Two days before Saturday's horrific shooting in Tucson, Arizona, which gravely wounded Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and left six people dead, a woman disrupted the reading of the US Constitution on the floor of the US House of Representatives by loudly appealing to Jesus to intercede against the foreign-born usurper of the presidency, Barack Obama.

 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN

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