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Convention

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A woman from the Midwest United States serves as a delegate at a major political convention.

281 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1964

39 people want to read

About the author

Fletcher Knebel

57 books27 followers
Fletcher Knebel was an American author of several popular works of political fiction.

He graduated from high school in Yonkers, New York, spent a year studying at the Sorbonne and graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio in 1934. Upon graduation, he received a job offer from the Coatesville Record, in Coatesville, Pennsylvania. He spent the next 20 years working in newspapers, eventually becoming the political columnist for Cowles Publications. From 1951 to 1964, he satirized national politics and government in a nationally published column called "Potomac Fever".

In 1960, he wrote a chapter on John F. Kennedy for the book Candidates 1960. This seemed to ignite a passion for writing books and he turned his hand to book-length works. He wrote fifteen books, most of them fiction, and all of them dealing with politics. His best-known novel is Seven Days in May (1962), (co-written with Charles W. Bailey), about an attempted military coup in the United States. The book was a huge success, staying at number one on the New York Times bestseller list for almost a year, and was made into a successful film also titled "Seven Days in May" in 1964.

Knebel was married four times from 1935 to 1985. He committed suicide after a long bout with cancer, by taking an overdose of sleeping pills in his home in Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1993. He is the source of the quote: "Smoking is one of the leading causes of statistics."

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Judy.
1,973 reviews472 followers
June 29, 2018
This political novel was #10 on the 1964 bestseller list. It is a fictional story of what is said to be the 30th Republican National Convention. In real life, the 30th Convention was in 1972 when Richard Nixon was nominated to run for a second term as POTUS.

In the novel, the year is not stated. The top two contenders for the nomination are the Governor of California and the Secretary of the Treasury, who was the current (fictional) President's stated choice. The polarizing issue was nuclear weapons. The Treasury Secretary was also the predicted winner but after he makes an unwise statement in the early days of the convention, his lead shrinks to almost nothing. Who will win?

These political novels with fictional politicians make me a bit crazy because I cannot stop trying to make them fit with history. I read an earlier bestseller by these authors (Seven Days in May, 1962), about a fictional attempted military coup written during the first year of the Kennedy administration. I have read Fail-Safe as well as Allen Drury's Advise and Consent. The most recent was The Man by Irving Wallace, read just ten days before I read Convention.

I suppose they are worthwhile reads as examples of what could happen. On the whole, I feel much more comfortable reading actual Presidential biographies, each one of which necessarily includes at least one National Convention.

From Convention I learned more than I knew before about what it is like on the convention floor and what the delegates actually do. But there were also plenty of scenes in smoke-filled rooms and the shenanigans connected with the press.

Knebel and Bailey have been mocked as bad writers but they were both respected political journalists who knew the scene. The writing is fast-paced, the characters are believable rather than cliches, and they know how to build and plot a story. Plus, it is women who save the day!

In any case, I am now finished with the bestseller list for 1964! I will try to write a post soon about my thoughts on the list as a whole and how it reflects life in that year.
Profile Image for Alex.
353 reviews44 followers
August 22, 2016
Like a time capsule from the early 1960's, specially preserved for nostalgic political junkies. Not quite a thriller, but somewhere in that neighborhood. The whole novel takes place during the course of a contested Republican National Convention. I can't get enough of Knebel and Bailey.
Profile Image for Daniel.
269 reviews
June 11, 2010
Book was so dated that they had to explain what a computer was...so it suffered from being written a while back.
Profile Image for Michael Burhans.
587 reviews42 followers
June 1, 2012
Politics junkies will love this slightly wonkish but fairly good story about the inside horse trading at a major party political convention. Knebel was the master of the genre in his day.
Profile Image for Vincent Solomeno.
111 reviews1 follower
November 21, 2019
"Convention" is my favorite novel by Fletcher Knebel. The author takes the reader on a rollercoaster ride through an old fashioned national convention of a major American political party. Published in 1964, the book's ensemble of characters find themselves in Chicago for the Republican National Convention. Competing factions - torn by personal loyalty, personal ethics, and a desire for advancement - struggle with each other and themselves against the background of a nominating fight between the urbane Secretary of the Treasury and shrewd Governor of California. Mr. Knebel was himself a journalist who covered conventions of that era. That experience informs his prose. The reader is transported back in time to the smoke filled rooms and underhanded deals that, for better of worse, characterized the brokered conventions of yesteryear.

This is my favorite of Mr. Knebel's books. Other novels by the author require the reader to suspend disbelief (i.e., a President gone insane, a military coup). "Convention" is gripping and entirely believable.
Profile Image for Keith Raffel.
Author 6 books49 followers
August 29, 2016
What fun to read a novel set against a party convention in the 1960s written by Fletcher Knebel and Charles Bailey, the authors of SEVEN DAYS IN MAY. The leader for the nomination going into the convention defies common wisdom and speaks out on the arms race. All hell breaks loose, a groundswell of public opinion affects the result, and the polling of the states actually matters. Imagine a race being fought over an issue that matters! Boy, did this book make me nostalgic.
Profile Image for Claudia Gerwin.
66 reviews
September 21, 2018
Written by the author of Seven Days in May, this is another exciting tale, based on the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago - but with a different twist.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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