The actor is the latest to publish a book poking fun at the president. He reveals why he put pen to paper – plus a round up of the best of the rest

Broadly speaking, there are three types of Donald Trump book. The first are the furious political deep dives, called things like Fire and Fury and Fear and It’s Even Worse Than You Think, written by respected journalists who find themselves at a loss to explain exactly how America did this to itself. The second are books written by – and presumably exclusively purchased by – members of the Trump family, which probably don’t deserve any more explanation than that. And then there is the third type.

The third type of Trump book is my favourite, because they are the satirical ones. They are the books that hoist Donald Trump up by his knickers and throw sausages at him. They are just as angry as the other books, but understand the cleansing power of mockery.

Right now we’re in the middle of a satirical Trump book boom. Stephen Colbert has written one, Whose Boat Is This Boat: Comments That Don’t Help in the Aftermath of a Hurricane. Trevor Noah has written one, The Donald J Trump Presidential Twitter Library. There are Donald Trump annuals. There are Donald Trump intelligence tests.

And now there is a Donald Trump poetry book. Dumpty is a collection written by John Lithgow, illustrated by the actor’s own beautiful drawings. In it, Stephen Miller is “The Little Man Who’s Not All There”. John Bolton finds himself the star of a Lewis Carroll-inspired verse entitled “The Walrus and the Kleptocrat”. My favourite poem, entitled “A Liberal’s Complaint”, goes after Fox News in the most delightful way imaginable; “Sean Hannity, Sean Hannity, You tidal wave of vanity! … Your brain is mashed bananity! You’re such a horse’s fannity!”

It’s an interesting truism that fascists hate satire. They are incredibly paranoid about being laughed at John Lithgow

But Trump is the central figure here, presented as Dumpty, a lumbering, slow-witted oaf who trudges through the book, intermittently stopping to wreak further unthinking damage on a world that deserved better. However, this wasn’t always the plan.

“My first impulse was to write a book only about the cast of characters in the Trump administration and leaving him out entirely, almost as a way of insulting him,” says Lithgow. “Because it is the most amazing rogues gallery. But, you know, after I’d written four or five poems, I realised I’m not really writing about them. I’m writing about Trump.”

The gamble paid off, not least because, as Lithgow puts it: “By the time I finished the book, about 80% of these people had already been fired or resigned or walked off the job. So it was ancient history.” It’s a quandary I can relate to. I also spent this year writing a collection of satirical short stories, entitled Bedtime Stories for Worried Liberals. And writing anything vaguely topical in a year as breakneck as 2019 has proved to be completely exhausting. Brexit was supposed to happen – twice! – before the book even came out. Boris Johnson became prime minister a week before my copy deadline.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest John Lithgow. Photograph: Lisa O’Connor/AFP via Getty Images

Lithgow, at least, took solace in the fact that the Trump administration has contained some historically awful people. “They’re very theatrical,” he points out. “And one thing that I find remarkable is that people are kind of startled. They’re startled by the fact that they hadn’t thought about Jim Mattis for eight months. Or John Kelly or Harold Bornstein or Tom Price and Ronny Jackson.”

The size of these characters might go some way to explaining the current satire boom. It isn’t just that times are bad and our need for catharsis is urgent; it’s that all of these figures are cartoons. They’re so out of touch, so one-dimensional in their pursuit of power at any cost, that they have become ripe targets for parody.

But to what end? What’s the point of satire in an age like this?

Lithgow pauses, and points me towards a quote by Peter Cook, who once said that he modelled his satirical 1960s club The Establishment on “those wonderful Berlin cabarets that did so much to stop the rise of Hitler”.

“Colbert and Seth Meyers and Samantha Bee and Noah are all incredible, and yet they are not changing the course of human events,” he goes on. “Trump is. It’s the satirist’s dilemma, I guess. Are you only solidifying people’s opinions rather than changing them? Because God knows, the reaction to satire by people who are politically opposed to the satirist is just more entrenched than ever. They are enraged by satire. And I think it’s an interesting truism that fascists hate satire. They are incredibly paranoid about being laughed at.”

Lithgow admits that this was the marketing strategy behind Dumpty. “We were all secretly hoping that Trump would tweet about Dumpty, but maybe he’s got too much on his mind,” he says. “Besides, I don’t think he’d get any of the jokes.”

Top Trumps

A Ladybird Book About Donald Trump

by Jason Hazeley and Joel Morris (Michael Joseph)

The 35th entry in the deathless Ladybirds for Grown-Ups series is purely about Trump, as evidenced from the great big orange on the cover. As with all the other subjects covered by Hazeley and Morris, the book matches images from the Ladybird archive with deceptively simple text. For example: “These men are building Donald’s new tower in Soligorsk. To build his tower, Donald needed help from his Russian best friends. The interesting thing about Donald’s Russian best friends is that he does not have any Russian best friends and they do not exist and this page is a witch hunt.”

Cat vs Trump: An Intelligence Test for Cats With Low Self-Esteem

(Headline)

This is less a book and more a quiz. Do you own a cat? If so, is your cat more intelligent than Donald Trump? Cat vs Trump is divided into problem solving, social skills, communication skills and coordination skills. For example, test your cat’s loyalty by observing how often it greets you when you return from some time away. Now, compare that with Trump ordering James Comey to swear a pledge of loyalty in 2017. Who wins? A fairly simplistic book with a central gimmick that doesn’t entirely work, but a good present for a cat person nonetheless.

The Unofficial Donald Trump Yearbook

by Adam G Goodwin, Dicken Goodwin and Jonathan Parkyn (Portico)

Two writers from CBBC’s So Awkward have produced an old-school annual, dedicated purely to Donald Trump. Cut out some letters and assemble them at random to form a brand new Trump tweet. Play Top Trumps with Trump opponents such as Barack Obama (“Signature move: The Barack Attack”) and Jimmy Carter (“Catchphrase: ‘Eat my nuts!’”). Read the “Donald of Destiny” horoscope. Enjoy the short story “Trump Trek”. Play America’s Next Top President (Mike Pence has “Gotta work that vice presidential booty if he wants to be numero uno”). You get the idea.

The Beautiful Poetry of Donald Trump

by Rob Sears (Canongate)

Similar to Dumpty, but less authored. Whereas Lithgow wrote all the poems in Dumpty himself, this is a collection of Trump’s own lines from speeches and tweets that have been reordered into poems, feeding his most repeated themes into a mincer until they become declarations of vulnerability. What’s remarkable is that every line in every poem is directly attributed to its source. So the poem “I too have a nuclear button / My greatest source of pride and joy / It is a much bigger button and more powerful than his / Constructed with American Steel / And my button works! / No, sir. You wouldn’t want to play nuclear weapons with this fucker” is pulled from two 2013 tweets, a Bloomberg interview and a campaign speech. Impressive.