Last go around, two years ago, the MP for Carleton surprised us all in announcing that he
wouldn't be running. “I knew it would be hard on my family life to do this,” he said.
That concern has passed.
Pundits posit Pierre Poilievre as the next party leader. I have no doubt he'll win, if only because there's no one else in the race.
"Governments have gotten big and bossy," begins Poilievre, who once served in the largest cabinet in Canadian history. The man who provided coffee, hot chocolate, and donuts to members of the "Freedom Convoy" goes on to criticise the Grits for exploiting Covid for political purposes.
Poilievre said more, but nothing so interesting or revealing as the collection of books behind his well-oiled hair.
Invite me into your home and I will cast an eye over your bookshelves. And I will judge.
Beginning on the left uppermost shelf we have a copy of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's
Cancer Ward next to the Bodley Head edition of
August 1914.
The only volume I recognise on the top centre shelf is Rupert Murdoch's HarperCollins Study Bible (sadly, lacking dust jacket).
The next shelf holds five Dickens novels belonging to the Penguin Clothbound Classics series: Bleak House, Hard Times, Oliver Twist, A Tale of Two Cities, and Great Expectations. PenguinRandomHouse sells these volumes as part of a six-volume set. I wonder what it means that A Christmas Carol is missing.
Framed family photos dominate the second row of shelves, but look carefully and you'll see the second edition of Richard Rohmer's
Patton's Gap (Toronto: Stoddart, 1998). I bought two thousand copies when working for a national book chain. Sixteen years passed before I read it. If interested, my thoughts on
Patton's Gap can be found in this ageing
Reading Richard Rohmer post.
There aren't many Canadian books on Pierre Poilievre's shelves. The Rohmer aside, the only others I see are Stephen Payne's Canadian Wings: A Remarkable Century of Flight and Mark Reid's 100 Photos That Changed Canada. The Americans dominate: Reagan: In His Own Hand, Henry Kissinger's Diplomacy, Karl Rove's Courage and Consequence, Thomas Maier's The Kennedys, and Peter Baker's Days of Fire: Bush and Chaney in the White House.
There are no books on Canadian politics.
What else have we got? A paperback copy of 1984 is followed by The Wicked Wit of Winston Churchill. A Regnery Gateway book is next. I thought at first it might be Ann Coulter's High Crimes and Misdemeanors: The Case Against Bill Clinton, but now have my doubts.
All in all, it's a curious collection, arranged in a manner that can make sense only to Poilievre himself. Everything seems so neat, so orderly, so tidy, but look carefully and you'll find evidence of a more chaotic fourth row of shelves, all but blocked by his well-polished desktop. As with career politicians, some lean left, but most lean right.
I have to assume that there are professional Zoom/bookshelf stagers for the likes of him.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tour.
One would think so, Susan. I'm reminded of poor Stéphane Dion who gave a speech from his office during the 2010 Prorogation Crisis. Just over his shoulder were the words Hot Air. It was the spine of a book, of course; in this case Jeffrey Simpson et al's tome on the climate crisis. One wonders where Dion's advisors were that evening.
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