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Advise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust Jacket

Description: Hardcover. 8vo. Doubleday and Company, Garden City, NY. 1959. 616 pgs. First Edition/First Printing (stated). Price-clipped DJ has light shelf-wear present to the DJ extremities. Bound in cloth with titles present to the spine. Boards have light wear present to the extremities of the boards. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid Allen Drury’s Advise and Consent is one of the high points of 20th Century literature, a seminal work of political fiction—as relevant today as when it was first published. A sweeping tale of corruption and ambition cuts across the landscape of Washington, DC, with the breadth and realism that only an astute observer and insider can convey. Allen Drury has penetrated the world’s stormiest political battleground—the smoke-filled committee rooms of the United States Senate—to reveal the bitter conflicts set in motion when the President calls upon the Senate to confirm his controversial choice for Secretary of State. This novel is a true epic showing in fascinating detail the minds and motives of the statesmen, the opportunists, the idealists. From a Senate old-timer’s wily maneuvers, a vicious demagogue’s blistering smear campaign, the ugly personal jealousies that turn a highly qualified candidate into a public spectacle, to the tragic martyrdom of a presidential aspirant who refuses to sacrifice his principles for his career—never has there been a more revealing picture of Washington’s intricate political, diplomatic, and social worlds. Advise and Consent is a timeless story with clear echoes of today’s headlines. From Wikipedia: Advise and Consent is a 1959 political novel by Allen Drury that explores the United States Senate confirmation of controversial Secretary of State nominee Robert Leffingwell who is a former member of the Communist Party. The novel won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1960 and was followed by Drury's A Shade of Difference in 1962 and four additional sequels. This Pulitzer prize-winning novel's title comes from the United States Constitution's Article II, Sec. 2, cl. 2, which provides that the President of the United States "shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consults, Judges of the Supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States...." Author Allen Drury, a staunch anti-Communist, believed most Americans were naive about the dangers of the Soviet-led communist threat to undermine the government of the United States: Drury believed that the Soviet Union led an international totalitarian communist movement whose ultimate goal was world domination and that communists were willing to achieve that goal by whatever moral, immoral, or amoral means worked, including propaganda, lies, subversion, intimidation, infiltration, betrayal, and violence. A Drury thesis was that American liberalism contributed to communism's incremental success in its war against American democratic capitalism. Advise and Consent is a fictional account of the nomination of a prominent liberal, Robert Leffingwell, to the cabinet position of Secretary of State during the height of the Cold War. It is said that the story is based on Drury's first-hand insight into the personalities and political practices of the late-1950s including the 1954 episode wherein Senators Styles Bridges and Herman Welker threatened to publicize a homosexual in Senator Lester Hunt's family if Hunt did not resign from the Senate . . . . In fact, the website of the U.S. Senate states: "Based on Drury’s observations, one may guess who the author based his fictional senators on: Alben Barkley may be the dashing majority leader; Robert Taft might be the minority leader; Kenneth McKellar may be the southern senator; the overzealous Senator Fred Van Ackerman might be a caricature of Joseph McCarthy; and the tragic Brigham Anderson, who kills himself in his Senate office, reminds us of Senator Lester Hunt of Wyoming, who took his life in the Russell Building in 1954. The president and vice president strongly resemble President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Vice President Harry Truman. The entire incident could be loosely based on the Chambers-Hiss case. However, the book is not meant to be a roman a clef, and it does not purport to disguise a true story. Drury considered his fictional senators to be composites. The author was not interested in profiling any one individual but in capturing a gallery of stock characters that Washington had seen and would be seeing again." Several sources agree that character Robert Leffingwell, the novel's nominee for Secretary of State represents Alger Hiss. A U.S. President decides to replace his Secretary of State to promote rapprochement with the Soviet Union. Nominee Robert Leffingwell, a darling of liberals, is viewed by many conservative senators as an appeaser. Others, including the pivotal character of Senator Seabright (Seab) Cooley of South Carolina, have serious doubts about Leffingwell's character. The book tells the story of an up-and-down nomination process that most people fully expect to result in a quick approval of the controversial nominee. But Cooley is not so easily defeated. He uncovers a minor bureaucrat named Gelman who testifies that twenty years earlier then-University of Chicago instructor Leffingwell invited Gelman to join a small Communist cell that included a fellow traveler who went by the pseudonym James Morton. After outright lies under oath by the nominee and vigorous cross examination by Leffingwell, Gelman is thoroughly discredited and deemed an unfit witness by the subcommittee and its charismatic chairman Utah Senator Brig Anderson. The subcommittee is ready to approve the nominee. At this crucial moment in the story, the tenacious Senator Cooley, dissects Gelman's testimony and discovers a way to identify James Morton. Cooley maneuvers Morton into confessing the truth of Gelman's assertions to Senator Anderson who subsequently re-opens the subcommittee's hearings, thus enraging the President. When the President's attempts to buy Anderson's cooperation fail he places enormous pressure on Majority Leader Robert Munson to entice Anderson into compliance. In a moment of great weakness that Munson will regret the rest of his life, Munson provides the President a photograph, acquired quite innocently by Munson, that betrays Anderson's brief wartime homosexual liaison. Armed with the blackmail instrument he needs, the President ignores Anderson's proof of Leffingwell's treachery and plots to use the photo to gain Anderson's silence. The President plants the damning photo with leftist Senator Fred Van Ackerman thinking he will never need to use it. But the President has underestimated Van Ackerman's treachery and misjudged Anderson's reaction should the truth come out. Through a series of unfortunate circumstances involving Anderson's wife, the Washington press corp, and several senators, Anderson decides there is only one way to maintain his honor and dignity. He kills himself. Anderson's death turns the majority of the Senate against the President and the Majority Leader. Anderson's suicide and the exposure of the truth about Leffingwell's lies regarding his communist past set in motion a chain reaction that ends several careers and ultimately rejects Leffingwell as a nominee to become Secretary of State. The final 100 pages of the book contain several "teases" by the author making it clear there is a sequel to come (Drury wrote five more books in his series), but Advise and Consent effectively ends with the overwhelming vote to reject Leffingwell. The segue to the next book in the series is the death of the President (heart attack) and the elevation of Vice President Harley Hudson. Bookscoinsandmore prides itsself in customer satisfaction. We are glad you Chose to make your purchase with us and we hope you enjoy. We try our best to describe each item to the best of our ability and should you have any other questions please do not hesitate to ask. 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Price: 229.99 USD

Location: Hanover, Pennsylvania

End Time: 2024-12-03T03:04:22.000Z

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Advise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust JacketAdvise and Consent by Allen Drury 1959 1st Edition Vintage Hardcover Dust Jacket

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Binding: Hardcover

Language: English

Special Attributes: 1st Edition, Dust Jacket

Signed: No

Author: Allen Drury

Publisher: Doubleday

Topic: Political

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

Subject: Washington Politics

Year Printed: 1959

Original/Facsimile: Original

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