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Books

Buckley: The Life and the Revolution That Changed America: As suits a conservative, Charlie Kirk was following a tradition (though, as suits a conservative who wants to get anything done, he had to make some allowances for circumstance). There's a classic path that starts with going to an elite school, then writing a book about how unbearably smug the progressive teachers, students, and administrators are, and then parlaying this into a career of producing conservative commentary and going on campus tours to hold lively Q&A sessions. Like many traditions, it has a surprisingly recent progenitor: William F. Buckley went to Yale and wrote about God and Man there; Ross Douthat wrote something in a similar vein about Harvard, Dinesh D'Souza about Dartmouth, and Ben Shapiro on UCLA. The next step is to start writing regular articles, get on TV, and then split your time between being a campus influencer and a political kingmaker.

But Buckley got there first, and did it best. He co-founded the National Review, wrote the country's most popular syndicated column, and also periodically re-forged the American conservative coalition—critiquing Eisenhower from the right, running the John Birch Society and the Objectivists out of the conservative mainstream, making Goldwater a viable nominee, and then helping Reagan to be a conservative standard-bearer. Meanwhile, for many people who grew up in the relevant time period, his TV show, Firing Line, was their first introduction to live political debate. (I've talked to more than one person who assumed that Firing Line was part of a genre, and who were distressed to learn later on that, no, it was just Buckley's way of doing things.)

Buckley had an incredibly potent mix of insider and outsider status. He was a consummately WASPy public figure who was also a Catholic; he had an absurdly broad vocabulary in English, but actually learned it as his third language (he learned Spanish from his nanny, then French at school in Paris, before finally adopting English). He came from money, but not from old money; his father was a slightly more adventurous version of the modern SPAC promoter archetype, who was entrepreneurial enough to travel to Mexico to drill for oil but who was better at selling stock than actually finding any or keeping it from being expropriated. (Buckley himself came close to bankruptcy in the late 70s, in part because he'd bet against oil by investing heavily in a small media conglomerate that used heavy leverage to roll up drive-in movie theaters just in time for the oil crisis to crush that business.)

And he kept the contradictions going in his own behavior. Buckley defended segregation in the 1950s but was one of the rare media figures to interview people like Eldridge Cleaver a few decades later, and got Jesse Jackson one of his early media hits (he also wrote in 1970 that American ought to have a black president soon—on that issue, at least, Buckley was a quarter-century ahead of the electorate, though he died a year before it happened). Buckley called Gore Vidal a "queer" on national TV, but had a wide circle of gay friends and hosted fundraisers for AIDS-related causes at a time when neither was all that socially acceptable broadly, much less among conservatives. He aggressively policed the bounds of acceptable conservative behavior, which led to weird contortions like defending Nixon over Watergate but mostly breaking with him after he restored diplomatic relations with China.

Buckley also found time for other hobbies: lots of sailing, throwing parties, writing spy novels, etc. He participated in what was a minor fashion among mid-century men of letters: getting infatuated with a sociopathic murderer and providing weirdly sympathetic coverage even though the man was obviously a monster. (No, not Henry Kissinger—Buckley strenuously advocated for the release of Edgar Smith, who, to be fair to Buckley, was a surprisingly eloquent writer, but also, to be fair to the legal system, was also clearly guilty of a sordid murder. A few years after Smith's release, he tried to do it again, and Buckley turned him in.)

Put all of this together and Buckley is not just a great subject for a biography but someone who seems to have designed his life around that. This might be downstream of a narrower goal, like being the kind of person you absolutely must invite to a party. All the flaws and contradictions are part of this. But, in the end, the book ends up being an extended review of a multi-decade multimedia entertainment experience. We have thousands of hours of footage and millions of words telling us exactly how Buckley wanted to present himself to the public. To the extent that there are glances at the real Buckley, they come from how the quality of his writing varied depending on the topic (the book calls out Buckley's public policy books as slapdash, but praises his book about sailing and his week-in-the-life, Cruising Speed—given the first-person narration and Buckley's longstanding amphetamine prescription, this technically counts as gonzo journalism). But Buckley himself remains a mystery. Was his accent the natural result of a quirky upbringing, or an affectation? Was he an attention-seeker who tacked right as a fashion statement that would shock the establishment, or a reactionary who deftly hid his views? Did he use all those obscure words because he was delighted by the English language, or because getting a letter from Norman Mailer asking "What the hell does 'emunctory' mean?" was funny? The easy part about writing a biography of someone as prolific as Buckley is that there's a lot of material—enough, in this case, for a balanced view, even though the material was also sufficient for many different kinds of hatchet job. But, in the end, it's an extended study of a character named William F. Buckley, who for decades was played by an actor named William F. Buckley about whom we don't know very much.

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