About This Book
A weary congressional candidate returns to his home district after a hard-won nomination, greeted by rapturous crowds, brass bands, and the showmanship of campaign managers. The narrative alternates scenes of public triumph—handshakes, carriage parades, and backstage political maneuvers—with quieter moments of introspection about the personal costs of ambition and an absent loved one. It traces local electoral customs and the negotiation between sincere affection and organized spectacle, portraying how communal enthusiasm, partisan strategy, and private feeling interact in an episodic account of a political campaign.
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