Read Mrs. Nixon: A Novelist Imagines a Life Online
Authors: Ann Beattie
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Also by Ann Beattie
Distortions
Chilly Scenes of Winter
Secrets and Surprises
Falling in Place
The Burning House
Love Always
Where You’ll Find Me
Picturing Will
What Was Mine
Another You
My Life, Starring Dara Falcon
Park City
Perfect Recall
The Doctor’s House
Follies
Walks with Men
The New Yorker Stories
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
ISBN 978-1-4391-6871-4
ISBN 978-1-4391-6873-8 (ebook)
A portion of the poem “Skinny-Dipping with Pat Nixon” by David Kirby appears courtesy of the poet. The article “Patricia Nixon, Wife of Former President, Dies at 81” is reprinted with permission of the
Los Angeles Times
(Copyright © 1993
Los Angeles Times
). The logo for
The Tech
is reprinted with permission of
The Tech
.
For Jane and Bob Hill
Major and Minor Events of Mrs. Nixon’s Life
Approximately Twenty Milk Shakes
The Quirky Moments of Mrs. Nixon’s Life
Moments of Mrs. Nixon’s Life I’ve Invented
Mrs. Nixon’s Junior Year Play: The Romantic Age
Mrs. Nixon Plays Elaine Bumpsted, a Role Formerly Acted by Bette Davis
Mrs. Nixon Gives a Gift: Stories by Guy de Maupassant
Mrs. Nixon Considers Automatic Writing
Mrs. Nixon Reads “The Young Nixon” in Life,
A Story Occasioned by Considering Richard Nixon and Dolphins
Mrs. Nixon Lies, and Plays Hostess
The Writer’s Feet Beneath the Curtain
King Timahoe, with a Coat Neither Cloth nor Republican
Mamie Eisenhower Is Included in Tricia’s Wedding Plans
Mrs. Nixon Does Not Bend to Pressure
Mrs. Nixon Hears a Name She Doesn’t Care For
Mrs. Nixon Reads The Glass Menagerie
A Home Movie Is Made About Mrs. Nixon in China
What Did Mrs. Nixon Think of Mr. Nixon?
Mrs. Nixon Is Taken on a Drive, 1972
David Eisenhower Has Some Ideas While Sitting by the Fire
Mrs. Nixon Joins the Final Official Photograph
“The Dead” in New Jersey, 1990
Mrs. Nixon Sits Attentively as Premier Chou Offers the First Toast
General Eisenhower Tries Role-Playing
Mrs. Nixon Has Thoughts on the War’s Escalation
Mrs. Nixon Indulges Her Feelings
Mrs. Nixon Uses Her Powers of Persuasion
Mrs. Nixon Reacts to RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon
Possible Last Lines, with (Curtain)
She once said her “only goal” was to “go down in history as the wife of a president.”
Mrs. Nixon’s Thoughts, Late-Night Walk, San Clemente
A note on the book: What you will read is based on research. There is a chronology appended that will allow the reader to know when certain events or moments in Mrs. Nixon’s life occurred. Also at the back of the book there are notes that correspond to individual sections. I imagine dialogue to which I had no access; I do my best to write as I think my characters would think and speak, based on what I’ve read about them. In some cases, factual events are used only as points of departure, which should become clear; those times I write fiction will be recognizable as such. The majority of events, letters, and names are real. (As a young man, Richard Nixon did date Ola Florence Welch; King Timahoe was the Nixons’ dog; Henry Kissinger was Secretary of State.) My readings of many texts, from a story by Maupassant to the play
The Romantic Age,
are conveyed as I understand them.
Tuck is given credit (he denies it, somewhat hollowly) for putting on an engineer’s hat and waving the Nixon train along in 1960, somewhat enraging the candidate who had just begun a rear platform speech. He is also alleged to have rapped sharply on the glass of the driver’s compartment in the Nixon campaign bus one day in Iowa, ordering the driver to start up. He did. The only problem was that Mrs. Nixon was still in town, a fact that was not discovered until the caravan was several miles down the road.
—Frank Mankiewicz,
Perfectly Clear:
Nixon from Whittier to Watergate
Mrs. Nixon
Mrs. Nixon’s Nicknames, Including Her Code Name as First Lady
Buddy
Miss Vagabond
Irish Gypsy
St. Patrick’s Babe in the Morn
Babe
Pat
Miss Pat
Patricia
Dearest Heart
The White Sister
Starlight