Seats for this are going fast
The woman who trumped Trump—twice
You do not want to miss our January 21 luncheon with E. Jean Carroll, the celebrated journalist who twice trumped Trump in court for his sexual transgressions.
Carroll will discuss her best selling memoir, Not My Type: One Woman Against a President, “a hilarious, hopeful, revelatory behind-the-scenes account of the trials that riveted the nation” [USA Today]. Join us for what promises to be a rambunctious, irreverent conversation with Molly Jong-Fast, a NY Times and MS Now contributor and fellow Silurian.
William F. Buckley: conservative, curious, contradictory
Sam Tanenhaus, celebrated author of the widely praised biography, Buckley: The Life and Revolution That Changed America, spoke at the Silurians Press Club's Dec. 17 luncheon.
By David A. Andelman
It was 20 years in the making, but an hour with Sam Tanenhaus, author of Buckley, brought William F. Buckley into focus more deeply and compellingly, in all his immense complexity and diversity, than I thought I'd known for the last 70 or so years.
That had as much to do with the author of this incomparable biography as his subject—the indefatigable research and eloquent prose of the longtime editor of The New York Times Book Review. Prompted by his interlocutor, John Avalon, who had clearly read all 800+ pages of prose (and 200+ pages of footnotes), Tanenhaus brought all this and more to the Silurians Dec. 17 luncheon at the National Arts Club.
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Recent Guests/Speakers
The Rise, Fall, and Rediscovery of Sid Caesar
“When you do the book, David, you’re going to get this question: Who was Sid Caesar?”—Mel Brooks
By Mel Laytner
For a comedian who could speak every language by speaking none, Sid Caesar left behind a silence that has lasted far too long.
David Margolick, Silurian and author of the eloquent biography, When Caesar Was King, unravelled that silence to recall the uncanny comedic contributions of that brilliant, hungry, panic-driven force of live television at a packed Silurians luncheon on Nov. 19.
History Repeats: Julian Zelizer on Power, Presidents, and the Press
By David A. Andelman
Seventeen years ago, Richard Galant, then managing editor of CNN Opinion, called the historian of the United States Senate. He was looking for someone to comment on the unusual fact that two senators, Barack Obama and John McCain, were running against each other for President. Galant was directed to Princeton’s Julian Zelizer, “one of the leading political historians of our time.”
Now, 17 years later, Galant introduced Zelizer at October’s Silurian luncheon noting that the historian’s “ability to recall the whole of American political history, going back more than a century is extremely impressive.”
Molly Jong Fast on Mothers, Memoirs, and Mayhem
By David A. Andelman
As the great columnist and Silurian Joyce Wadler observed, when your grandfather was Howard Fast who wrote Spartacus and went to jail for refusing to name names to the HUAC, your father is novelist Jonathan Fast, and your mother is Erica Jong, whose book Fear of Flying sold over 22 million copies, you’ve got to have no small amount of chutzpah, let alone talent, to write about them—and yourself.
That's just what Molly Jong-Fast did.


























