NO SUCH THING AS A BAD DAY.NO SUCH THING AS A BAD DAY by Hamilton Jordan Longstreet Press, $22.00 THIS MODEST BOOK IS LIKELY TO work with two different audiences. For the general public, it's the latest respectable entry in a field largely established by John Gunther, in 1949, with Death Be Not Proud, his elegiac el·e·gi·ac adj. 1. Of, relating to, or involving elegy or mourning or expressing sorrow for that which is irrecoverably past: an elegiac lament for youthful ideals. 2. book about his teen-aged son's battle with brain cancer. The phenomenally popular Tuesdays With Morrie is the best-known recent illustration of the genre. These are books in which the presence or possibility of death becomes the occasion for looking past the hurly-burly of daily ambition to lasting questions of family, generosity, courage, love, and purpose in life. Hamilton Jordan, who in his early thirties was one of the two or three most influential figures in the Carter administration Noun 1. Carter administration - the executive under President Carter executive - persons who administer the law , had by age 50 suffered three different episodes of cancer. The first and most dire was lymphoma lymphoma, a cancer of the tissue of the lymphatic system. There are two categories of lymphomas. One type is termed Hodgkin's disease, the other, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (see lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's). See also neoplasm. , diagnosed just after he turned 40; then skin cancer detected in early stages; then prostate cancer prostate cancer, cancer originating in the prostate gland. Prostate cancer is the leading malignancy in men in the United States and is second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer death in men. . Most of this book is the story of how Jordan learned about the diseases; the endless encounters with doctors and hospitals as he decided on experimental, high-risk treatment options; and the ways his condition made him think about his use of the years behind him and whatever years he had left. Jordan intercuts his own pre-illness biography into this story, concentrating on two episodes: living through the civil-rights transformation of the early 1960s, when his eccentric uncle Clarence Jordan Clarence Jordan (July 29, 1912 - October 29, 1969), a farmer and New Testament Greek scholar, was the founder of Koinonia Farm, a small but influential religious community in southwest Georgia and the author of the Cotton Patch translations of the New Testament. was running the multi-racial Koinonia Noun 1. koinonia - Christian fellowship or communion with God or with fellow Christians; said in particular of the early Christian community fellowship, family - an association of people who share common beliefs or activities; "the message was addressed not just to cooperative in Georgia; and his experience as a rural development worker in Vietnam, in 1967. When wondering why he has been so sick so often, Jordan speculates that his frequent exposure to Agent Orange in his early twenties might have had some cumulative effect. Jordan also mentions his earliest encounters with Jimmy Carter, when Carter was first deciding to run for the White House, but most of the book is about the process and consequences of the author's cancer treatments. In an unforced and convincing way, Jordan comes across as a big-hearted, brave figure who has thought seriously about his experiences and been improved by them. The high-road points he makes will sound treacly if summarized in a review. I'll simply say that I read the book in an evening, with absorption and without effort, and ended up with greatly increased admiration for the author. This brings us to the other audience: the permanent Washington crowd that lionized Jordan when he came to town and then all but whooped with delight when he was driven out, with his beaten president, four years later. Jordan speaks briefly about his misadventures with the Washington media/social establishment and the embryonic em·bry·on·ic or em·bry·on·al adj. Of, relating to, or being an embryo. Embryonic In the life cycle of the round worm, a very early life stage occurring within the uterus of the female round worm. Special Prosecutor special prosecutor: see independent counsel. system, sounding as if, unlike his employer President Jimmy Carter, he is genuinely beyond score-settling with them. But some of the Washington grandees who remorselessly scorned scorn n. 1. a. Contempt or disdain felt toward a person or object considered despicable or unworthy. b. The expression of such an attitude in behavior or speech; derision. 2. Jordan (many of whom are still around) might have an uncomfortable moment or two when reading this book. An unstated operating assumption of the permanent D.C. establishment is that outsiders like Jordan are essentially brought into town on sufferance by mere toleration; as, to remain in a house on sufferance s>. - Blackstone. See also: Sufferance , for tryouts. They can adapt, "make it," and survive when their time with the administration has ended--or they can be drummed out of town and dismissed as losers. In D.C. terms, Jordan was in the latter category; he worked for a losing administration, and he didn't cut it in society. Yet this book suggests that he has become a more substantial person than most who dismissed him--and even before he went through this transformation, he was a more complicated person than the "Hannibal Jerkin" caricatured in the press. This has made me think of the damage done to other people hooted out of town. (Gary Hart?) If you're thinking of a midsummer gift for a favorite columnist or Style section writer, consider this book. JAMES FALLOWS, a contributing editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw. for The Washington Monthly, is the author of six books, most recently Breaking The News. |
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