From the White House briefing room podium to the world of literary romcoms may not be the most obvious career leap.
But Dana Perinoâs debut novel, Purple State, is written around a question that feels oddly timely in an America more politically divided than ever: can relationships â especially love â survive the red-blue split?
The former George W Bush press secretary and now Fox News host, 53, was on the receiving end of a flirtatious Donald Trump last month, when he deflected her question about starving Iranians to tell her she was getting âbetter lookingâ with age.
Now the bestselling author has turned to fiction with a story about a young New York political PR who falls for a Midwestern man in a swing state.
Drawing on her own life, Perino took inspiration from what she describes as an âunlikely marriageâ and years of watching politics pull people apart as much as bring them together.
It is a theme that runs straight through Purple State, published this week, which follows Dorothy âDotâ Clark as she leaves New York for Wisconsin â that most coveted of swing states â and finds herself falling for a truck-driving local who is about as far from her usual type as it gets.
Perino says the idea had been with her for years, and began with a much broader fascination about what happens when people from very different Americas are thrown together.
âA lot of people donât know or donât remember that I was born in Wyoming, grew up in Colorado, my family still ranches in Newcastle, Wyoming, and Iâve had the opportunity to live abroad,â she said, explaining that she has also had stints in the UK, Washington and New York.

Dana Perino, a Fox News host, has turned to fiction with a story about a young New York political PR who falls for a Midwestern man in a swing state

As White House Press Secretary, Perino accompanied President George W Bush to Iraq in 2007
âI had this idea bopping around in my brain, kind of when reality TV started, that wouldnât it be fun if I dropped my friends and family from Wyoming into the middle of Manhattan and vice versa, took my friends here and put them on the ranch and said: âGood luck. Iâll see you in three months.â
âI think that they would thrive but that they would get to know each other better, understand each other better â and then, who knows, along the way love could blossom.â
In other words: what if the people who assume they have nothing in common were forced to discover that they might? A kind of Heated Rivalry for DCâs power elite.
For Perino, though, the roots of the novel are not just political. They are deeply personal, too.
Her âterrible quarter life crisisâ â that point when everything looks orderly on paper but feels far less certain in reality â was pivotal.
Looking back on her mid-20s, Perino had the graduate degree, the Capitol Hill job with a member of Congress and the sense that she was climbing steadily. But she had not dated anyone in two years and had become disillusioned with politics during the Monica Lewinsky scandal (âwhen none of the womenâs groups stood up for herâ) and a string of others.
Then came the moment that changed everything.
At a church singles group, she recalled opening up to an older woman about her worries, only to be told: âGod says: âFear not. Iâve got you. Relax.â Youâre 25. Everythingâs going to be fine.â
A few months later while enjoying the summer, she sat next to a man on a plane who would become her husband. This August, she and Peter McMahon will have been together for 29 years.
âHeâs British and 18 years older than me,â she said. âHe lived in England at the time. Thereâs 100 reasons why we shouldnât have been together.â

Looking back on her mid-20s, Perino had the dream career â but she had not dated anyone in two years and had become disillusioned with politics

She says that when she chose to be loved, her career didnât suffer the way she expected
The lesson she took from the successful relationship was not that love derails ambition but something quite the opposite: âWhen I chose to be loved, my career did not suffer.â
That, really, is at the heart of Purple State.
Yes, the novel is set against the backdrop of an election. Yes, it plays with the idea of romance across the red-blue divide. But Perino seems more interested in nudging readers away from the rigid life plans and ideological checklists they place on themselves.
Asked whether she deliberately wanted to show that people from opposite sides politically could still be soul mates, Perino agreed.
But polling just after the 2024 election, she pointed out, showed a dramatic increase in Americans saying that they would never even consider dating somebody who voted the other way â a shift she found alarming.
âPolitics is interesting to me. Obviously, I love what I do but politics is not who I am,â she said. âAnd I think that thatâs a sure way to not enjoy your life. It closes you off to friendships and opportunities.
âHopefully, in this book is a gentle lesson of: Wear your politics lightly and youâll enjoy your life.â
Perino namechecked James Carville and Mary Matalin, the veteran Democratic and Republican strategists whose marriage became Washingtonâs most famous example of opposites attracting.
âHe worked for Bill Clinton, she for George HW Bush, and they fell madly in love and really were able to go out on the speaking circuit and show people you could have debates with your loved one and go home and still be deeply in love.â
She also recalled meeting a couple in Florida who told her they had been in a âred-blue marriageâ for 31 years.
Still, when asked whether there were other high-profile Washington couples who had inspired her, Perino was careful, stressing that the novel is âaspirationalâ and fiction.
One famous bipartisan marriage does not, after all, exactly amount to a dating trend, and modern political life often seems to provide more evidence of people sorting themselves into tribes than escaping them.
That may be why the setting matters. Perino places her heroine not in Washington, where politics can become its own all-consuming social currency, but in Wisconsin â a true purple state where the culture war feels less performative and more lived.
The decision was also her way of saying that the political class often misunderstands the way that the rest of the country thinks, forever trying to âfixâ Middle America when, in her view, it doesnât need fixing at all.
âWe donât need your help. Weâre good,â she said.
She also suggested that romance across political lines might feel more plausible outside the usual power centers.
Of her own move to New York, Perino said she had once assumed that politics could only really be done from the capital. But living in Manhattan changed that.

Perino met her husband, British businessman Peter McMahon, when they sat next to each other on a flight

James Carville and Mary Matalin, the veteran Democratic and Republican strategists, became Washingtonâs most famous example of opposites attracting
In DC, she said, everything felt âso transactional.â By contrast, 225 miles up the I-95 ânobody cared what my politics was.â
Even so, she made a rule: âI donât talk politics at the dog park.â There, in Central Park, Perino said she found common ground with people who would probably vote differently simply because they all shared the much more immediate business of adoring their pooches.
That same instinct shows up in the sort of man she gives Dot.
Perino said she deliberately steered away from the finance bros and status-hungry political obsessives who often dominate the dating pools of New York and DC.
She talked about ambitious young women imagining that the perfect life means the perfect career, the perfect timetable and the perfect man in a puffer vest working in finance â only to discover that life may have other ideas.
What interested her more, she suggested, was the question beneath all that striving: Is the thing you always assumed you wanted actually the thing that will make you happy?
That is why Purple State feels, at its core, less like a book about party labels than one about people loosening their grip on the blueprint they once wrote for their lives.
Perino said that when young women come to her for advice, they often begin with the professional questions â difficult bosses, stalled careers, sexism.
âThen, at the end of the conversation, almost every single time theyâll say: âCan I ask you one more question?â And itâll be about how they could possibly find love.â
It is a telling anecdote, and one that helps explain why a woman once known for briefing the White House press corps has now written a novel about romance, risk and the possibility of stepping outside the bubble.
Purple State: A Novel, by Dana Perino is published by Harper


