Who Are The Key Characters In Commander In Cheat: How Golf Explains Trump?

2026-01-13 11:09:41 195

3 Answers

Jonah
Jonah
2026-01-15 10:22:11
Reading 'Commander in Cheat' felt like watching a satirical play where Trump’s golf buddies are the chorus, echoing his worldview. The book’s 'key characters' are less about individuals and more about archetypes: the sycophants (like club members who praise his terrible shots), the frustrated opponents (like journalists who’ve witnessed his cheating), and the silent witnesses (caddies who keep his secrets). Reilly’s storytelling turns a putt into a power move, and I kept thinking about how golf, usually a game of honor, becomes a metaphor for Trump’s rule-bending. The most striking 'character' might be the collective disbelief of those who’ve played with him—how they shrug off his behavior as 'just Trump.' It left me wondering how much we normalize in the name of personality.
Mila
Mila
2026-01-16 08:50:29
Ever since I picked up 'Commander in Cheat: How Golf Explains Trump,' I couldn't help but marvel at how the author, Rick Reilly, uses Trump's relationship with golf to peel back layers of his personality. The key figures here aren't just fictional or historical—they're real people, with Trump himself front and center. The book dives into his infamous golfing habits, like cheating and exaggerating his skills, which Reilly argues mirror his broader approach to life and politics. It's less about individual 'characters' and more about the cast of folks orbiting Trump's golf world—caddies, club members, and even other politicians who've played with him.

What fascinated me was how Reilly paints Trump's golf persona as a microcosm of his leadership style. There are anecdotes about him bulldozing rules, bending truths, and even bullying opponents into losing. The book doesn't focus on a traditional 'ensemble,' but recurring figures like former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer and golf legends like Jack Nicklaus pop up, often to highlight contrasts in integrity. It's a wild ride—part biography, part social commentary—and it left me seeing golf courses as stages for power plays.
Grayson
Grayson
2026-01-16 11:04:43
I lent my copy of 'Commander in Cheat' to a friend who’s not into politics but loves golf, and their reaction was priceless: 'Wait, he really moves the ball with his foot mid-game?' The book’s brilliance lies in how Reilly frames Trump’s golf antics as a cast of recurring 'characters'—not just people, but habits and quirks. Trump’s obsession with winning (even when he loses) is the protagonist, and the supporting roles go to his enablers—club managers who turn blind eyes, pros who flatter his game, and partners who let him cheat to avoid his wrath.

One standout 'character' is the myth of Trump’s golf prowess—a fiction he’s crafted over decades. Reilly contrasts this with actual golfers like Tiger Woods, who’ve diplomatically dodged playing with him. Even the courses themselves feel like characters, especially Trump-owned ones, where he allegedly inflates his scores. It’s a darkly comic look at how ego shapes reality, and I found myself laughing at the absurdity—until I remembered it’s all real.
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