REREAD
Eugene Burdick wrote – or co-wrote – five novels, but three of them are his best known – and most controversial.
*The Ugly American (1958) – co-written with William Lederer
This novel is set in the fictional Southeast Asian nation of Sarkhan. It concerns well-meaning American diplomatic officials who do not speak the language or understand the culture of the country they are attempting to aid, with the result being that the U.S. is losing to the communists in the contest to win “the hearts and minds” of the population.
Of course, Sarkhan was a thinly disguised Viet Nam where Burdick and Lederer thought the real contest in the real nation was being lost for the same reasons.
A popular film adaptation of the novel, starring Marlon Brando, was released in 1963.
*Fail-Safe (1962) – co-written with Harvey Wheeler
This was a harrowing Cold War account of what could go wrong during the era of nuclear competition and proliferation. In this scenario American bombers armed with nuclear weapons are mistakenly ordered to destroy Moscow and it becomes difficult to call them back. It first appeared as a three-part serialization in the Saturday Evening Post during the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962. Later that same year it was published in book form.
It too became a well-received movie when it was released in 1964, starring Henry Fonda.
*The 480(1964) – written by Eugene Burdick
In 1959, an actual U.S. data science firm named Simulmatics, divided the U.S. population into 480 groups, based on party affiliation, socio-economic status, geography, race, ethnicity, religion and gender. By using computers to run simulations predictions could be made as to how any – or all – of the groups would react to a particular candidate, or policy position, or even how they would vote, even before they were asked.
Of course, the information derived from the simulations could also be used to sell soap, automobiles, or, you name it. The danger was – and is -- manipulation of the public on a huge scale. Burdick wrote the novel as a warning about the danger of that kind of information – and those methods – especially if it fell into the wrong hands.
Burdick uses the concept of the 480, but creates a fictional group of political operatives who take the methods of the real Simulmatics and refines them into a more sophisticated use of computers and the information that goes into and comes out of the simulations.
At the heart of the story is a competition between an old-fashioned political operator who uses the time-tested and heretofore successful methods of cajoling, arm twisting, backslapping, and horse trading to advance his chosen candidate for the presidency while young upstart political consultants who utilize the computer along with psychology, psychiatry, and political science to tailor their candidate, a political novice, in a fashion that will give him greater appeal to a greater number of voters.
The book was not the huge bestseller that the other two were and it never attracted Hollywood film producers. That is because it didn’t have the appeal of a story about conflict and misunderstanding in a Southeast Asian country or especially one about an unthinkable, but real, possibility of nuclear war.
Burdick, with an undergraduate degree in psychology and a PhD in political science, probably thought that it was just as important as the topics that had been at the centers of the two bestsellers. And in many ways, time would prove him to be correct, but it comes off as too wonkish for many readers. Adapting it for film was never a possibility.
But it is an important book. Though it was published more than fifty years ago, all we have to do is look around us and see that what Burdick tried to warn us about has been realized. What began during 1959, has taken over all campaigns, but on a larger scale, with political consultants making fortunes utilizing those methods of manipulation that Burdick warned us about.
Eugene Burdick co-wrote two bestselling novels that were made into major films, and practically no one remembers him or his books today. I read The Ugly American, Fail-Safe, and The 480 many years ago. And now I have reread The 480.
Eugene Burdick is a mostly forgotten writer who sits on my “writers who deserve to be remembered” shelf.