The writing is tight and dramatic. "Seven Days in May" was adapted to the big screen in a 1964 film starring Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster, and again thirty years later in a 1994 made-for-television movie starring Forrest Tucker. Both versions do justice to the novel.
If you enjoy "Seven Days in May," you may also enjoy "Night of Camp David," also by Fletcher Knebel. "Night of Camp David" largely follows the same formula as "Seven Days in May," but the issue is presidential incapacity rather than a coup d'etat.
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At times dramatic, humorous, and hard-hitting, it's a book to read if you like a political thrillers.
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"Night of Camp David" is clearly a product of its time. Written while the twenty-fifth amendment was pending but before its ratification, it treats the issues that the amendment addressed: how the government functions when its head can't handle the job but also can't recognize, or can't admit, his or her own incapacity. Those issues were particularly relevant when Knebel began writing the novel because Lyndon Johnson had recently succeeded to the Presidency after President Kennedy's assassination, the vice-presidency was vacant, and the next two successors were 71-year-old House Speaker John McCormack and 86-year-old Senate President pro tem Carl Hayden. (The novel also brings down a vice-president over a scandal involving construction contracts, almost a decade before the kickback scandal that brought down Vice-President Agnew.) But the issues are just as relevant today as they were almost forty years ago, even though they no longer engage the public's attention as they did in the mid-1960s.
"Night of Camp David" also follows the successful formula of its author's successful "Seven Days in May": a loyal subordinate begins doubting his larger-than-life superior, and must persuade a skeptical establishment about his doubts before the nation suffers irreparable damage. "Night of Camp David" is not quite as dramatic or suspenseful as "Seven Days in May," but its plot is equally intricate, and if you liked one then you will almost surely like the other.
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This is the central issue in this novel set sometime around a decade after Kennedy's administration (the book was written in 1962), as an unpopular President Lyman faces unrest in both in the armed forces and the civilian sector over a proposed disarmament treaty with the Soviet Union, labor troubles at home, and a poor economy. Colonel Martin Casey, reporting to the Chairman of the Join Chiefs of Staff, suspects something is up when a series of suspicious events and circumstances occur, which lead him to conclude that JSC Chairman General Scott is readying a coup. With only days before the potential coup, President Lyman, and his trusted allies Colonel Cassey, Secretary of Treasury Todd, Senator Clark from Georgia, the President's Appointment Secretary Girard and Secret Service Agent Corwin, must act quickly to try to corroborate or disprove the theory of a military coup. The investigation includes a kidnapping of one of the President's men at a secret military base, a suspicious death that rattles the President, the use of sexual innuendo for information, and more.
The picture this novel paints is a frightening one. The book is not a difficult one to read or comprehend. In the end, you're left wondering if it could possibly happen today. The book is set up as a chronological account of the actions of the Presidents team over the seven days until the coup; the pressure of time is constantly felt through the novel, which just adds to the suspense. Although over 300 pages, the book starts up quick and never stops. SEVEN DAYS IN MAY is an excellent political thriller that entertains and makes you wonder. Once you pick it up you'll find it difficult to put down. I highly recommend.