From Conservapedia Advice and Consent (1959) is a widely acclaimed novel by Allen Drury about a Senate confirmation battle for a nominee to become Secretary of State, who was suspected being a communist. This political fiction was published in 1959 and soared to the top of the New York Times bestseller list, and also won a Pulitzer Prize. The hearings concerning Alger Hiss are thought to have inspired parts of this book, as did the suicide of Sen. Lester Hunt (D-WY) in 1954 in his Senate office.[1]
Drury was a reporter who covered the U.S. Senate during World War II for a news wire, and later joined the staff of the New York Times.
The sales ranking of this book as of Sept. 5, 2020 on Amazon.com, 706 pages in length, is:
Drury's book was the basis for a 1962 movie directed by Otto Preminger. The movie's cast featured: Henry Fonda, Charles Laughton, Don Murray, Walter Pidgeon, Peter Lawford, Gene Tierney, Franchot Tone, Lew Ayres, Burgess Meredith, Eddie Hodges, Paul Ford, George Grizzard, Irv Kupcinet, Inga Swenson, and Betty White. (At the time, Lawford was the brother-in-law of then President John F. Kennedy.)
Categories: [movies] [political fiction]
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