Christopher Buckley (novelist)

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Christopher Buckley (novelist) : biography

1952-9-28 –

Christopher Taylor Buckley (born December 24, 1952) is an American political satirist and the author of novels including God Is My Broker, Thank You for Smoking, Little Green Men, The White House Mess, No Way to Treat a First Lady, Wet work, Florence of Arabia, Boomsday, Supreme Courtship, Losing Mum and Pup: A Memoir and, most recently, They Eat Puppies, Don’t They?: A Novel. He is the son of William F. Buckley Jr. and Patricia Buckley and inherited Canadian citizenship through his mother.

Life

After a classical education at the Portsmouth Abbey School, Buckley graduated from Yale University in 1975., Yale University, Office of Public Affairs and Communications, May 24, 2009 He was a member of Skull and Bones like his father, living at Jonathan Edwards College. He became managing editor of Esquire Magazine.

In 1981, he moved to Washington, D.C., to work as chief speechwriter for Vice President George H. W. Bush.

 This experience led to his novel The White House Mess, a satire on White House office politics and political memoirs. (The title refers to the White House lunchroom, which is known as the "mess" because the Navy operates it.) 

Thank You for Smoking is another satire, its protagonist a lobbyist for the tobacco industry, Nick Naylor. He followed that with more humor about Washington in the form of Little Green Men, about the government agency investigating UFO sightings. His No Way To Treat A First Lady has the president’s wife on trial for assassinating her husband and Florence of Arabia is about a do-gooding State Department bureaucrat in the Middle East. His one serious novel, Wet work, is about a billionaire businessman avenging his granddaughter’s death from drugs.

Thank You for Smoking was adapted into a movie written and directed by Jason Reitman, and starring Aaron Eckhart. It was released on 17 March 2006.

Buckley also wrote the non-fiction Steaming To Bamboola, about the merchant marine, as well as contributed to an oral history of Milford, Connecticut, and is an editor at Forbes Magazine. Buckley has written for many national newspapers and magazines, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Time, The Atlantic Monthly, Smithsonian, US News & World Report, Vanity Fair, Vogue, Conde Nast Traveler and numerous humorous essays in The New Yorker.

Obama endorsement

For a brief time in summer and fall 2008, Christopher Buckley also wrote the back-page column for National Review, the conservative magazine founded by his father. This came to an end after Buckley endorsed the 2008 Democratic Presidential Nominee Barack Obama in October 2008. Buckley’s endorsement, entitled "Sorry Dad, I’m Voting for Obama", appeared in The Daily Beast. He chose The Daily Beast to avoid complications with National Review. After many readers and contributors expressed their displeasure, Buckley resigned from National Review. Buckley last wrote a column for The Daily Beast in April 2010.

Family

As an only child, Buckley found his mother easier to talk to than his father, because "She got it," the "it" being religion."Questions for Christopher Buckley: The Right Stuff," Deborah Solomon, The New York Times Magazine, October 23, 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/26/magazine/26wwln-q4-t.html

He first married Lucy Gregg Buckley, daughter of Donald Gregg, who served as assistant to Vice President Bush for national security affairs. They have two children, Caitlin and William (born in 1988 and 1991). He also has a son Jonathan (born 2000), from a relationship with former Random House publicist Irina Woelfle. Buckley and Gregg divorced in spring 2011.

According to the New York Post, "Author Christopher Buckley has married Dr. Katy Close, a South Carolinian who runs a clinic in Haiti. They wed in Stamford, Conn., on Sept. 29 [2012] in front of 150 guests."