The Atlantic

A Perfectly Postmodern White House Book

What makes <em>Fire and Fury</em> important is that it is not just about Trump, but a product of the same culture that produced Trump.
Source: Alastair Grant / AP

The reviews of Fire and Fury are in, and they are pretty furious themselves. Michael Wolff, author of the best-selling expose of the Trump White House, has been accused of every kind of journalistic malfeasance: reconstructing scenes he couldn’t have witnessed, retelling gossip as if it were gospel, letting his sources’ agendas drive his portrayals. President Trump himself has attacked the book as “a work of fiction,” and many of the journalists who have weighed in on it basically agree. At least, they complain, there’s no way to tell if the stories Wolff retails are true.

To anyone who pays attention to actual American fiction, such attacks have a familiar ring. For the last 15 years—ever since the publication of James Frey’s , a book sold as a memoir that turned out to be heavily fictionalized—American literature has  been obsessed with

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