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Charles W. Bailey, II (1929–2012)

Author of Seven Days in May

4+ Works 685 Members 15 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Charles W. Bailey

Works by Charles W. Bailey, II

Seven Days in May (1962) 555 copies, 14 reviews
Convention (1964) 73 copies, 1 review
No High Ground (1983) 33 copies

Associated Works

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Bailey, Charles Waldo, II
Birthdate
1929-04-28
Date of death
2012-01-03
Gender
male
Education
Harvard University
Occupations
journalist
editor
Organizations
The Minneapolis Tribune
Cowles Publications
Relationships
Knebel, Fletcher, (co-author)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Places of residence
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Place of death
Englewood, New Jersey, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

15 reviews
This could have been written today. It is as timely now as it was in 1962, maybe more so. The military is planning to take over the government. Due to the eye of Colonel Jiggs Casey who questions some things he sees in his role as the director of the Joints Staff, he goes to the President with his thoughts. This is the story of how the President prevents a Constitutional crisis.

This is a fast-paced political thriller. I could not put it down as the week went by. I was on the edge of my seat show more to see what would happen. The characters are good. The President is shown philosophizing at times as to what he, as President, should and needs to do--often alone. I am amazed at how this was kept secret for as long as it was--on both sides. Well worth the read. show less
It's the early 1960s, and the Cold War has heated up. Although the US and Soviets have signed an arms control agreement, the Soviets are cheating. Meanwhile, the top military brass are concerned that the US president is weak and ineffectual, and seek to take over the government in a military coup. Having stumbled on the plot, the US president has seven days to prevent the coup and to remove the treasonous military leaders from their positions without alerting the public. This made for a show more popular novel and a fine movie with George C. Scott as the president, and Burt Lancaster as the top renegade general.

I read this novel many years ago, and found it exciting; and so, I thought I'd try it again to see how it (and I) have aged. I liked it once again... found it exciting and suspenseful. Granted, the gender roles are traditional (something that a contemporary version would not have). While I cannot judge this work as if I'd not read the book before and seen the movie, I think it would hold up well today. As for the abridged version, I found it to be quite sufficient, with no noticeable gaps. I'd recommend it, or better still, the full version, for readers interested in political intrigue and believable counter-factuals.
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½
Very good political thriller based around a plot by a group of US Armed Forces Chiefs to overthrow a President whose attitude towards disarmament they disapprove of. The ramshackle nature of some of the ways in which the plot is foiled struck me as rather unlikely, but this is good tense stuff, even though I knew the outcome from having seen the classic film starring Burt Lancaster as Scott and Kirk Douglas as Casey. The book brings home to this British reader how much Americans reverence show more their constitutional arrangements, notwithstanding disagreement with individual office holders. show less

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Statistics

Works
4
Also by
3
Members
685
Popularity
#36,933
Rating
4.0
Reviews
15
ISBNs
15
Languages
1

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