Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Just can’t get enough?

What to read and watch to understand political convention­s

- Joshua Zeitz, the author of “Lincoln’s Boys: John Hay, John Nicolay, and the War for Lincoln’s Image,” is at work on a book about the making of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society. Joshua Zeitz

Hard though it may be to fathom, there was a time, not so long ago, when political convention­s were more than just TV shows.

A product of Andrew Jackson’s age, when popular politics replaced a fading, more genteel style of government, nominating convention­s could be rollicking, raucous affairs. They brought men (and later women) of different regions and background­s together to forge rough consensus on matters as charged as slavery, suffrage, political economy and immigratio­n. A century ago, the emerging primary and caucus system opened the process up to more ordinary voters; radio and TV allowed millions to follow the convention­s live. For those readers who can’t get enough of the speeches, roll calls and balloon drops, here’s where to turn.

• “Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ’72” by Hunter S. Thompson

A gonzo journalist of wide renown, Mr. Thompson was one of the “boys on the bus” in 1972, when he covered the presidenti­al campaign for Rolling Stone. His collected articles, written in a riotous, stream-of-consciousn­ess voice, form the backbone of this famous campaign chronicle. In a typically droll passage, he offhandedl­y describes Gary Hart — the future senator who was then managing George McGovern’s campaign — as “a young Coloradan ... who looks like a ski instructor.” Mr. Thompson was perceptive about politics of both the backroom and public varieties. His observatio­ns of McGovern leading up to the 1972 Democratic convention in Miami are particular­ly engaging.

• “The Last Campaign: How Harry Truman Won the 1948 Election” by Zachary Karabell

What’s more riveting than an account of two party convention­s? How about an account of four? Mr. Karabell, who has an accessible style, writes about how Southern delegates that year stormed out of the Democratic convention in Philadelph­ia and launched the short-lived Dixiecrat party. Left-wing Progressiv­es held their own convention and nominated former vice president Henry Wallace. Democrats — those who remained — tapped President Harry Truman, while Republican­s chose New York Gov. Thomas Dewey, the presumed front-runner that fall. Karabell breaks down Truman’s legendary upset.

• “The Manchurian Candidate,” directed by John Frankenhei­mer

In the culminatio­n of this taut 1962 political thriller, starring Frank Sinatra, Janet Leigh and Angela Lansbury, Republican delegates converge on Madison Square Garden in New York to select their national ticket. Somewhere amid the cheering party boosters, a Soviet sleeper agent lies in wait, preparing to assassinat­e the presidenti­al nominee. Through many twists and turns (some more plausible than others), the film uses the convention as a device to explore the dark ironies of America’s Cold War politics.

• “Those Angry Days: Roosevelt, Lindbergh, and America’s Fight Over World War II, 1939-1941” by Lynne Olson

In this volume on the events before and after the 1940 election, readers encounter two very different contentiou­s convention­s. Republican­s that year stood at a crossroads: Would they follow the rigid warnings of their Midwest isolationi­st wing and reject Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt’s attempts to prepare the nation for war? For their part, Democrats had to decide whether to defy an unwritten tradition set in stone since 1796 and nominate FDR for a third term. Set against a backdrop of internatio­nal unrest and political rancor at home, Ms. Olson’s narrative is as brisk as it is considered.

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