cover image Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President

Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President

Justin A. Frank. ReganBooks, $24.95 (247pp) ISBN 978-0-06-073670-5

Bush Administration policies are not only a ""great catastrophe"" but the products of a disturbed mind, according to this provocative blend of psychological case-study and partisan polemic. Psychoanalyst Frank sifts through family memoirs, the writings of critics like Al Franken and David Corn and the public record of Bush's personal idiosyncrasies for clues to the President's character, interpreting the evidence in the rigidly Freudian framework of child psychoanalyst Melanie Klein. He finds that Bush, psychically scarred by an absentee father and a cold, authoritarian mother, has developed a galloping case of megalomania, characterized by a Manichaean worldview, delusions of persecution and omnipotence and an ""anal/sadistic"" indifference to others' pain, with removal from office the only ""treatment option."" The author's exegesis of Bush's personality traits-the drinking problem, the bellicose rhetoric, the verbal flailings and misstatements of fact, the religiosity and exercise routines, the hints of dyslexia and hyperactivity, the youthful cruelty to animals and schoolmates, the smirk-paints an intriguing, if exaggerated and contemptuous, portrait of a possibly troubled public figure. But Frank's attempts to translate psychoanalysis into political analysis are unconvincing. Indeed, if Bush's reneging on campaign promises is a form of clinical ""sadism,"" and his budget deficits an ""unconscious attack on his own parents,"" then Karl Rove, the Cabinet, and both houses of Congress belong in group therapy with him.