Written in the deep dark days after George W. Bush's first election victory (2004), Al Franken's "The Truth With Jokes" must have been therapeutic for those in the United States who were horrified at the results of his first term and were counting on a Democratic victory to put things right.
Franken begins with a dissection of the Republican parties election strategy - Fear! - with extremely sharp wit that certainly puts to shame many of the British Political Comedians I've read, though admittedly the American scene is richer in material to work on: Jack Abramoff, Tom De Lay, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, George W Bush and a whole host of other dodgy, devious and disingenuous Republicans litter the pages of this book. Still with the '04 election, Franken moves on to debunking the smear campaign targeting John Kerry and his Vietnam War record. To a rational human the sheer shamelessness of the attack given Bush's record during his period of National Service (occasionally putting in an appearance with the Texas National Guard) is astonishing.
He is at his best when deals with issues such as Bush's Social Security Reform where he combines razor sharp wit with a sharp appreciation for the facts. This carries on through to his treatment of a number of issues including Gay marriage, Abortion and the Iraq War. Franken's critique of the Iraq War is on the left of the Democratic Party, which is to say that it is within the mainstream of "reasonable" thinking on the issue and not as critical as it could to be, though certainly funnier than it should be.
A brilliant, confidently written and laugh out loud read from start to finish, though as a committed Democrat (who now sits in the Senate) his confident expectations of future victory for his party being a New Dawn for America seems a little on the myopic side; as do some of his apologetics and celebrations of the Clinton era. Fortunately these are sufficiently tongue in cheek not to mar what is an extremely funny (if now somewhat historical) demolition of the pretensions of the Bush era as it entered its second term. It easily lives up to dual claims the title makes.