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A Flag Full of Stars, by Don Robertson (Fawcett Crest, 1965).
Don Robertson (1929-1989) may be largely forgotten nowadays, but that Cleveland, Ohio-born author certainly made his mark during his time. As the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History recalls, “Robertson’s first novel, The Three Days, was blasted by President Eisenhower for the obscene language used by its soldier characters. Robertson would publish eighteen more novels, many of which were set in Ohio and revolved around historical events. Among his best known books are The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread, Praise the Human Season, The Second Murder, and Paradise Falls. His novel The Ideal, Genuine Man was published in 1988 by Philtrum Press, Stephen King’s small publishing house. King called Robertson one of his three greatest influences and one of the best unknown published novelists in the United States.”
As if driven by the insistent seductions of sentimentality, Robertson set many of his tales in what to him would’ve been the recent past. And, “like John O’Hara, Robertson often linked novels that were not substantially related by including brief allusions to characters and events in his previous works,” explains Wikipedia.
I don’t find much information online about A Flag Full of Stars, which was first published by G.P. Putnam’s Sons in 1964. But I do know it was set amid the 1948 U.S. presidential election, which—contrary to a memorable banner headline in the Chicago Tribune—saw Democratic incumbent Harry Truman beat Republican New York governor Thomas E. Dewey. Kirkus Reviews had this to say about the book:
[This] is a very big novel which promises an enormous pay-off that it more than half delivers. It is generically modeled after Dos Passos’ U.S.A. and its story takes place everywhere on the special day chosen for the drama—the day when Truman beat Dewey in the upset of the century. Robertson tunes his typewriter up for nostalgia, but vamp as he will those leaden keys of realism, it rarely comes across. But in the many scenes, which are part of the fictional device on which the novel is built, the reader is here and there and everywhere, with candidates running for office, a movie, star, a major-league ball player, or a 110-year-old Civil War veteran. His death occasions one of the more imaginative moments in the book. Robertson … often writes much better than his characters talk, and the whole book revels in the irony of Truman’s triumph. … This may catch on.I don’t see many copies of the 1965 paperback edition, bearing Robert McGinnis’ cover illustration, available through the Internet. But acquiring the hardcover version at a reasonable price is much easier.