In 2002, during an interview on Larry King Live promoting his novel's first publication in paperback, King asked Libby: "Are you a novelist working part-time for the vice president?" Libby told King, "Well, I've never quite figured that out.... I'm a great fan of the Vice President. I think he's one of the smartest, most honorable people I've ever met. So, I'd like to consider myself fully on his team, but there's always a novel kicking around in the back somewhere." After hearing a brief plot summary, King wondered why Libby had set the novel in Japan, and Libby responded: At that time, Libby also appeared on The Diane Rehm Show on National Public Radio to talk about the novel. Libby said that he had chosen to set the novel in Japan in 1903, because it was a pivotal time in its history that had intrigued him.
Plot summary
According to the description of the book by St. Martin's Press:
Reprint publicity
Following his indictment on October 28, 2005, for obstruction of justice, perjury, and making false statements to federal investigators in Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald's CIA leak grand jury investigation, relating to the Plame affair, after the novel was reissued and promoted by its publisher and Libby in media interviews and the subject of subsequent reviews, it gained renewed attention. Notably, The Apprentice and Lewis Libby were the focus of the following week's New Yorker "Talk of the Town" column, by Lauren Collins, entitled "Scooter's Sex Shocker". Observing that "Libby has a lotto live up to as a conservative author of erotic fiction," Collins compares the novel to other so-called "sex shockers" written by conservative politicians and pundits and discusses themes of homoeroticism and incest in The Apprentice. She documents her view that "Like his predecessors, Libby does not shy from the scatological" with quotations from the book, regarding it as "Libby’s 1996 entry in the long and distinguished annals of the right-wing dirty novel."
Reception
Although the sexual passages and references make up only a few pages of the novel, one passage in particular — combining bestiality, pedophilia, prostitution, biastophilia, and voyeurism in just three sentences—has received wide attention: Another sentence in the book introduces necrophilia in addition to bestiality, as a hunter copulates with a freshly killed deer: "The man called out to the others that the deer was still warm. He asked if they should fuck the deer". In his June 7, 2007 Wall Street Journalop-ed calling for Presidentialpardon of Scooter Libby, conservative academic Fouad Ajami praised The Apprentice as a "remarkably lyrical novel... bears witness to an eye for human folly and disappointment."