20th-Century American Bestsellers


If you want to update an entry that belongs to you, you can do so here. If you have information concerning an entry that does not belong to you, you can email it to unsworth@uiuc.edu.
ResearcherAuthor: Title
Farrell ScifresHailey, Arthur: Airport
Assignment 1: Bibliographic Description
1. First Edition Publication InformationArthur Hailey. Airport. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1968.

The back of Leaf 3 states that the copyright is held by Arthur Hailey, Ltd.
2. First Edition in Cloth, Paper, or Both?The first American edition is published in trade cloth binding.
4. Pagination228 leaves, pp [8] [1-3] 4-103 [104-107] 108-258 [259-261] 262-440 [8]
The pages are numbered about one inch from the top outside corner of each page.
The book is divided into three main pages, all marked by an unumbered page (page 1, 104, 259) that read: PART ONE (TWO or THREE)and then are followed by a smaller font the gives a time (all EST).
5. Edited and/or Introduced? The first edition is niether edited nor introduced.
6. Illustrated? There are no illustrations.
8. General AppearanceThe presentation of the text is attractive and simple to read. The text is cleanly printed, with no smudges or smears. The corners on the dust jacket are worn and showing a bit of age. The actual pages are slightly yellow, showing their age. The book is bound in light blue cloth with embossed calico grain. The words on the spine of the book are embossed in gold. The spine has the title of the book embossed in gold, which is above a square with a dot in the middle (both embossed in light green), which is above the author's name, which is above the publisher's name. There are no writings or illustrations on the cover. The dust jacket has a photograph of an airport runway, with the title, author's name, and "A New Novel by the Author of ë'Hotelí'' printed across the bottom of the jacket. The spine of the dust jacket simply has "AIRPORT ARTHUR HAILEY" printed vertically, with "DOUBLEDAY" printed horizontally across the bottom.
The actual font of the text does have serifs and is Monotype Century Old Style. The font is rather large, and the pages are well spaced, not cluttered. There is about one to one and a half inches of margin around the text.
10. Description of PaperThe paper in this copy of the book is holding up extremely well. The only signs of age it shows is its slight yellow discoloration. The paper is smooth and even-textured and in exellent condition. It has no apparent stains or imperfections.
The endpapers of the book are of a heavier stock and are a dark, olive green color.
11. Description of BindingFront and back cover: Blue Cloth of embossed calico grain. Front cover is blank, but spine is stamped with gold writing and a light green design (title, design, author's name, publisher's name).
12. Title Page TranscriptionAIRPORT|Arthur Hailey|Doubleday & Company, Inc.| Garden City, New York|1968
14. Manuscript HoldingsAn email was sent to Doubleday & Company, Inc. (via Random House) on September 15, 2002 regarding the whereabouts of the manuscripts. No reply has been received as of September 22, 2002.
15. OtherOn the backside of Leaf 2 is listed:
Novels by Arthur Hailey
AIRPORT
HOTEL
IN HIGH PLACES
THE FINAL DECISION
RUNWAY ZERO EIGHT
(with John Castle)

Collected Plays
CLOSE-UP ON WRITING FOR TELEVISION
-------------------
Inscription
On the Front of Leaf 4 is an inscription that reads:
Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth.
And danced the skies in laughter-silvered wings.
From High Flight
By John Gillespe Magee, Jr. (1922-41)
Sometime Flight Lieutenant, Royal Canadian Air Force
----------------------------
Dust Jacket
The front inside flap of the dust jacket lists the selling price as $5.95 American Dollars. The back inside flap of the dust jacket states: "Jacket Photography Courtesy of American Airlines-Bob Taxis."
The inside flaps of the dust jacket have a brief summary of the book and also include a very brief ìAbout the Author.î
On the back cover of the dust jacker is a black and white photograph of Arthur Hailey with his family.
----------------
Disclaimer
On the back of Leaf 3, above the copyright information, there is a disclaimer (in italics) that states:
"All of the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.î
Assignment 2: Publication History
1. Other Editions: 1. After searching both Eureka and WorldCat extensively, it appears that the original publisher (Doubleday & Company, Inc.) did not publish the book in more than one edition.
Source: WorldCat; Eureka
2. Image of Cover Art A22191021009125626.jpg
4. First Edition printings or impressions?4. After searching Publisherís Weekly extensively, no information regarding other printings or impressions could be found.
Source: Publisherís Weekly
5. Editions from other publishers?5. There were several editions released from other publishers:
1968: Readerís Digest Condensed Books, Volume III, Spring Selections
1970: Bantam Books
1986: Dell Publishing Group
1992: Random House Audio Books
1993: Longman Publishing Group
1994: Buccaneer Books
1998: Planeta Editorial, South America
2000: Berkeley Publishing Group
Source: Books in Print (web)
6. Last date in print? 6. The most recent edition of Airport was printed by Berkeley Publishing Group in 2000.
Source: Books in Print (web)
7. Total copies sold? 7. According to Hackettís Eighty Years of Bestsellers (1977), there were 5,474,949 copies sold (paperback and hardback combined) as of 1977. Of those sold, 5,200,00 of the copies were paperback.
Source: Hackett, Alice. Eighty Years of Bestsellers. New York: R.R. Bowker & Co, 1977.
8. Sales by year?8. Sales information by year could not be found. However, according in Publisherís Weekly:
As of April 11, 1968 Airport was ì a new bestseller, just published two weeks ago and selling furiouslyî with 8,600 copies sold.
As of April 8, 1968, Airport was ìcontinuing a steady march up bestseller lists!î
As of May 20, 1968 there were 150,000 copies in print.
As of June 24, 1968 there were 175,000 copies in print.
As of July 8, 1968 there were 190,000 copies in print.
As of July 29, 1968 there were 215,000 copies in print.
As of September 16, 1968 there were 230,000 copies in print
As of May 26, 1969, there were 300,000 copies in print.

Sources: Publisherís Weekly April 11, 1968-May 26, 1969

9. Advertising copy: 9. In Publisherís Weekly on January 8, 1968, their ë PW Forecastsí section advertised Airport as follows:
ìAirport. Arthur Hailey. Doubleday, $5.95.
This is a novel bookstores will welcome, a good story in the bestseller tradition. Along with an audience prepared by ëHotel,í the new book has an appeal for almost all readers. The scene this time is a great modern airport, Lincoln International, near Chicago; the time is one critical day, the third of a big snowstorm which has seriously hampered operations. The reader is introduced into the personal lives of a half a dozen to a dozen characters, chief among them the manager of the airport, Mel Bakersfield. There are many minor conflicts ñ of love, sex, business, and psychological problems ñ all building up to the tremendously exciting scenes of a shattered transoceanic plane trying to make its way back to the airport and a runway that canít, but must, be cleared.
(Alice P. Hackett)
Source: Publisherís Weekly January 8, 1968, p64
11. Other promotion? 11. After searching Publisherís Weekly and the web extensively, no other ads or promotions can be found, although the ë PW Forecastí for Airport does indicate that Doubleday was planning a major national publicity program.
12. Performances in other media? Audiocassette:
Airport was recorded in 1992 on Random House Audio Books.
Source: Books in Print (web)
Movie:
In 1970, the movie Airport was released starring Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin, and Helen Hayes. The movie was nominated for ten Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Source: Google.com, http://www.dvd.reviewer.co.uk/reviews/details.asp?Index=646
13. Translations? 13. Spanish Translation: ìAeropuertoî, 1998: Planeta Editorial, South America
Source: Books in Print (web)
14. Serialization? 14. Airport was not serialized.
Source: Publisherís Weekly
15. Sequels or Prequels? 15. There is no indication that there were sequels or prequels to Airport.
Source: Worldcat, Eureka
Assignment 3: Brief Biography
In a 1997 interview with the Boston Globe Magazine, best-selling author Arthur Hailey was asked if he could “consciously fabricate best-sellers.” He answered frankly that he “never, never, never think[s] ‘is this a book that could go into big number?’” when he is writing. In the same in interview, Hailey admitted that his first thought when writing his books is “is this a subject which interests and enthuses me?” He acknowledges that unless he has “that feeling of interest” when writing a book, he just “can’t do it.”

Born on April 5, 1920, Arthur Hailey grew up in Luton, Bedfordshire, England, a town north of London.

Hailey’s formal schooling ended in England at the age of 14. He actually never went to high school, as it required tuition that his family could not afford. Hailey’s parents did not have much money; his father was a factory worker. In his 1997 Boston Globe Magazine interview, Arthur Hailey admits: “’I loved education, and, yes, I did want to go on learning. But in this town of 100,000 [Luton], there was one scholarship a year, and I was one of two finalists [but not the winner]. I wanted to write since I was 14.’” In a 1990 Boston Globe Magazine interview, Hailey admitted “one of the saddest days of his [my] life was his [my] last day at school.”

Before beginning his career as a freelance writer, Arthur Hailey pursued careers in both industry and sales. Hailey was also in the British Air Force, joining as a 19 year-old in 1939. He entered World War Two as a private and finished ranked as a flight lieutenant. In England, he worked as a junior clerk in a real estate broker’s office. Hailey even owned his own advertising and public relations company in Canada.

Although he is British by birth, Arthur Hailey and his wife immigrated to Canada and became naturalized Canadian citizens in 1947. Hailey has never lost his British citizenship and holds both Canadian and British passports. The couple actually met in Toronto, Canada.

Arthur Hailey has written numerous best-selling novels. A common, underlying theme in many of his novels is Hailey’s focus on natural disasters. Additionally, many of Hailey’s novels have also doubled as popular movies (ie: Hotel, Airport, Wheels).

Although he has lived in England, Canada, and the United States, as of 1997 Arthur Hailey had been living with his wife, Sheila, in Lyford Cay, the Bahamas for 28 years. Hailey has six children.

Arthur Hailey is hailed as a scrupulous researcher, spending at least a year learning the intricacies of his subject, numerous weeks planning for the book, and at least another year writing and rewriting.

Hailey’s writing career has spanned many decades and eleven novels. He wrote his first book, “The Final Diagnosis,” in 1959 at the age of 39. In fact, some of his more popular books were actually written nearly three decades after his first ones premiered: Strong Medicine (1984) and Evening News (1990). Hailey actually came out of retirement to write Detective, which was published in 1997. As of 1997, Hailey’s books had sold over 160 million copies and were printed in over 40 languages.
Assignment 4
Contemporary Reception:
Publisher’s Weekly’s March 5, 1968 edition hails Airport as “a novel bookstores will welcome, a good story in the best-seller tradition.” This review predicts a rather favorable reception for Hailey’s novel, noting that “an audience prepared by Hotel” will embrace it. This particular excerpt also notes that Airport is destined to be widely enjoyed, as “the new book has an appeal to almost all readers.” It goes on to provide a concise introduction to Airport’s general plot, making a quick mention of the “many minor conflicts—of love, sex, business, and psychological problems” that all come together to form the “tremendously exciting scenes of a shattered transoceanic plane trying to make its way back to the airport, and a runway that can’t, but must, be cleared.”

The Library Journal’s March 1, 1968 edition offers similar praise for Hailey’s Airport; their comments are nothing but positive. From the very beginning, this review not only praises the book itself, but also Hailey’s craftsmanship, asserting: “Arthur Hailey has managed to capture the excitement and intensity of life in a big city airport, and has evidently researched his subject thoroughly for technical accuracy.” The reviewer continues to sing Hailey’s praises as he mentions how “vividly portrayed” the character’s emotional lives are. This review is laden with powerful diction that characterizes Airport as a thrilling, passionate book. The reviewer’s word choices suck the reader in and make them want to drop everything and pickup a copy of the novel: “as a snow storm of blizzard proportions rages around the airport, Mel Bakersfeld, the airport manager, is beset with soul-trying problem: his social-climbing, man-hungry wife is demanding a divorce; his brother, suffering from a guilt complex resulting from a crash which was his fault, is planning suicide; an anti-noise demonstration adds to an already near chaotic evening; and a bomb threat and near-fatal explosion aboard an elite jet flying to Rome threatens destruction to everyone.” As is evident from his descriptions, this reviewer can do nothing but affirm his flattering opinion of Airport, when he declares the novel “a necessary addition to fiction shelves of any public library; definitely a circulator; you cannot go wrong with this one.”

In the May 15, 1968 edition of Library Journal, the reviewer offers a similar toast to Hailey’s novel. This account cites that Airport’s readers are “offered total involvements in the problems of Lincoln Metropolitan Airport,” a compliment to Hailey’s technique. They continue on to mention that Hailey has filled Airport with “a little bit of everything” by way of his main characters. This review finishes by distinguishing Airport as “a good acceptable escape.”

The New York Times Book Review in April 7, 1968 echoes the aforementioned reviews. After providing a description of airport activities, the brief concludes with a few critical words. It asserts that although “Mr. Hailey is a plodding sort of writer,” “he has just the talent to suggest the crashing ennui of airport routine, where only a mortal disaster can provide color.”

Time Magazine’s March 22, 1968 review of Airport brands the novel as a typical Hailey novel, stating that in it, he [Hailey] “gives airports his typical Hotel treatment.” Whatever similarities Airport may bear to other Hailey novels, Time does proclaim that
Hailey’s authentically described airport situation may “permanently ground all of his readers.” Time’s review is a bit more critical than others, referring to Airport as offering suspense and entertainment, but also branding it as an “obvious, but well-programmed novel.”

SOURCES:

“Airport” Publisher’s Weekly; vol. 193 (January 8, 1968): p 6
“Airport” Library Journal; vol. 93 (March 1, 1968): p 1020
“Airport” Library Journal; vol. 93 (May 15, 1968): p 2132
“Airport” New York Times Book Review; vol. 73 (April 7, 1968): p39
“20th Century Waiting Rooms” Time; vol. 91 (March 22, 1968): p 84
Subsequent Reception:
Except for the reactions to its immediate publication, it proved very difficult to locate subsequent reviews for Airport.
The Digest of Literary Biography’s 1982 Yearbook does offer significant information on Airport, however. At first, this source generalizes Airport as one of Arthur Hailey’s many novels “which have won popular acclaim because they elucidate clearly and simply some of the complex machinery of contemporary society and satisfy in melodramatic fashion the average reader’s desire for a well-packaged and entertaining story.” The DLB 1982 Yearbook continues on to praise Airport (along with Hotel, Wheels, The Moneychangers, and Overload) as being “based on a wealth of accurate information gathered during a year of exhaustive preliminary research and written according to a highly successful formula which blends facts with fiction.” The review perpetually praises Hailey’s painstakingly accurate portrayal of mechanistic industries and deems his research effort integral to his novels’ success.
On a more specific level, the DLB 1982 Yearbook cites that Airport “solidified Hailey’s reputation as a leading popular novelist.” This review credits the author with “exploring confidently and with interest the inner workings of a big-city airport, devising several gripping crises, and offering glimpses into the private frustrations, failures, and triumphs of his characters.” With regard to Airport’s specific characters, it is noted that “the concise dramatizations of the many difficulties of [the characters] … are intended to create sustained excitement and tension, while the human-interest stories are aimed at suggesting the hidden drama of everyday life.” This review suggests that there is, in fact, something for everyone in Airport’s pages.
The DLB 1982 Yearbook’s review of Airport concludes with acknowledging that: “detractors objected to the prefabrication of the novel, to its unbelievable coincidences, and to the stereotypical quality of its characterizations—faults which did not prevent it from becoming a prodigious best-seller nor its 1970 film version from becoming a hit.”
The Digest of Literary Biography’s 1982 Yearbook does mention that, in general, Arthur Hailey was singled out for his “reluctance to deal profoundly with complex issues” and for “his oversimplified picture of life, his slighting of literary artistry in favor of literary mechanics, his enthusiasm for his subject, and his energy as a story teller.” However, this review affirms that it is exactly these qualities that make Hailey’s novels the best-sellers that they are. They assert that “Hailey has enjoyed a wide readership and suffered critical attack for essentially” that reason. Furthermore, it is mentioned that Hailey’s novels have “succeeded in producing slick narratives that are engrossing only on a first reading,” and that in the future, Hailey “will be considered just another popular novelist of interest primarily to social and cultural historians.”

SOURCES:
Bevilacqua, Winifred Farrent. “Arthur Hailey.” Dictionary of Literary Biography Yearbook: 1982. (1983): 261-266.
Assignment 5
Critical Essay:
Best-selling author Arthur Hailey admits, "I am a very nosey person, always have been. I'm curious about everything." (http://www.s-t.com/daily/12-01/12-02-01/e05li133.htm) Arthur Hailey is an author who has come to fame because of his ability to ask questions about “ostensibly dry subjects” like hotel management, airport workings, and bank procedures. (http://www.s-t.com/daily/12-01/12-02-01/e05li133.htm) Using his research into each of these arenas, as well as others, Hailey has produced a string of different books. Sam Vaughan, one of Arthur Hailey’s editors at Doubleday and Random House, once noted that: “He [Hailey] likes to write about things or places that touch almost everybody. Arthur likes explaining things, how things work." (http://www.s-t.com/daily/12-01/12-02-01/e05li133.htm)

In these intricate explanations of how things work, Hailey found himself producing a succession of popular best-sellers. Between these novels, there are many common characteristics that contribute to their success: attention to fine details, relatable characters, reader appeal, relationship to popular culture, evidence of the “follow-on” phenomenon, translatability into other forms of media, etc. The success of Hailey’s best-selling novel, Airport, draws upon four of these main distinctions: relatable characters, the “follow-on” effect, attention to minute details, and its ability to easily be adapted into other forms of media.


Arthur Hailey’s first novel, Runway Zero Eight, was published in 1958. His second novel, Final Diagnosis, was published in 1959. This thriller focused on a hospital pathologist who erroneously causes the death of an infant. (http://www.s-t.com/daily/12-01/12-02-01/e05li133.htm) High Places (1960) and Hotel (1965) preceded Airport’s 1968 best-selling success. Six additional successful novels then followed Airport: Wheels (1971), The Moneychangers (1975), Overload (1979), Strong Medicine (1984), The Evening News (1990), and Detective (1997). Thus, it is very evident that Airport was neither the first nor the last that readers would hear of best-selling author Arthur Hailey. Because of this, Airport’s sales were much more successful. Essentially, Airport was a “Follow-On” bestseller, as some of its sales were no doubt due to the success of Hailey’s earlier novels.


When dealing with writing based on any sort of mechanical subject, it is obviously imperative that the author makes the technical details and scenarios as accurate ad believable as possible. Arthur Hailey’s books are famous for providing “information about the way a [that] particular environment functions, and how it affects both society and the people in it. “ (http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Hailey) Hailey does an excellent job of this in Airport; he describes the daily airport functions to such a degree of detail that there is virtually no question as to their technical authenticity. For instance, when describing the “flat face scope” in the radar room, Hailey describes it as
a horizontal glass circle, the size of a bicycle
tire, set into a tabletop console. Its surface
was dark green, with brilliant points of light
showing all the aircraft in the air within a
forty-mile radius. As the aircraft moved, so
did the points of light. Beside each light point
was a small plastic marker, identifying it.
The markers were known colloquially as
‘ shrimp boats’ and the controllers moved them
by hand as aircraft progresses and their
positions on the screen changed. As more
aircraft appeared, they were identified by voice
radio and similarly tagged.
(Hailey 91)
With his attention to details such as this, it is hard to discredit Hailey’s knowledge of airport technology. Similarly, this confidence in Hailey’s scientific accuracy helped to make his books best-sellers; consumers are much more likely to buy and enjoy a book that seems to be both intelligent and credible. Additionally, when a reader puts Airport down for the last time, they can be assured that they will feel as though they have learned something about the airline industry. In fact, it is noted that Hailey often spends nearly a year researching and gathering information prior to writing each of his novels. (Bevilacqua 261)


Part of what makes Airport, along with Hailey’s other novels, such successful best-sellers is the presence of real-life characters to who are both very believable and relatable to their readers. Additionally, it seems like the characters presented represent all walks of American life, thus almost every reader can relate to someone in Airport.

The most “real” character in Airport is Mel Bakersfield, the airport general manager who works his way into almost everyone of the book’s subplots. Airport follows Mel through the trials and tribulations of a crisis-filled evening in “a winter to be discussed at meteorologists’ conventions for years to come.” (Hailey 5) Mel Bakersfield’s emotions, thoughts, and actions are portrayed in such a way that readers cannot help but feel some sort of emotion for him and his situation, whether it be sympathy for his stressful situation, disapproval of his adulterous desires, or bewilderment for his ironically unfortunate turn of events.

The main focus of Mel Bakersfield’s adulterous desires is the beautiful, professional, and charming Trans America employee, Tanya Livingston. Mel and Tanya’s amorous intentions are evident from the start of them novel, when it is pointed out that the couple has had a handful of “dates” outside of the airport and that “if their meetings away from the airport continued, there could be a natural and obvious progression” of their extramarital relationship. (Hailey 31) Their association unfolds and presents itself more and more as the novel progresses. There is a very human side to it, as affairs are something that most readers know exist and many even participate in. Thus, their liaison catches the attention of the readers, who can often relate or sympathize, or who are just intrigued to follow it until the last pages of Airport.

Another Airport character that draws readers in is Trans American Captain Vernon Demerest. A rather contemptible character from the start, Demerest is one who definitely holds the reader’s interest, as he is involved in the action of Airport from the first pages to the last. Vernon Demerest is not only Mel Bakersfield’s brother-in-law, but he also plays the role of the conceited, adulterous, selfish pilot. Airport chronicles his affair with the beautiful British flight attendant Gwen Meighen. Demerest admits that he has no regrets about cheating on his wife Sarah with Gwen, and that his wife obviously was aware of his cheating tendencies: “He [Demerest] was also sure that Sarah suspected his philandering, if not in fact, then at least my instinct. But, characteristically, she would prefer not to know, and arrangement in which Vernon Demerest was happy to cooperate.” (Hailey 60) Throughout Airport, Demerest is not shy about his sexual affections for Gwen, remarking frequently on their much anticipated “layover” in Italy, a liaison which his was very much looking forward to:
The word ‘layover’ has long ago been adopted
officially by airlines and was used deadpan…
Demerest and Gwen Meighen were planning a personal
definition now. On arrival in Rome, they would leave
immediately for Naples for a forty-eight hour
‘layover’ together. It was a halcyon, idyllic
prospect, and Vernon Demerest smiled appreciatively
at the thought of it.
(Hailey 60)
Readers cannot help but be drawn in to follow along with the couple’s affair.

Another of Vernon Demerest’s relationship hooks readers, also. This is his relation with Mel Bakersfield, his brother-in-law. It is instantly evident that the two do not get along, and that Demerest delights in highlighting Mel’s errors and shortcomings: “Another thing which pleased him [Demerest] this evening was the Airlines Snow Committee report in which he had delivered a verbal kick in the crotch, aimed at his stuffed-shirt brother-in-law, Mel Bakersfield.” (Hailey 61) Throughout the course of the novel, Demerest never fails to focus his energy on causing “maximum embarrassment and irritation” to Mel. (Hailey 61) In this relationship, the distasteful side of human beings is shown. Readers latch on to this dysfunctional relationship. As it is much easier to feel sympathy for Baskersfield than for Demerest, readers follow the quarrels and vindictive conflicts throughout the entirety of the novel, hoping to see Mel end up on top and Demerest get some kind of retribution for his spiteful behavior. This conflict makes the novel appealing not only to the general reader, but also to those who can sympathize with similar in-law battles or malicious behavior at the workplace.


Hailed as “one of the original ‘disaster’ movies,” Airport was released in theaters in 1970. (http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?PID=1143268&frm;=sh_google) The cast was filled with stars ranging from Burt Lancaster and Van Heflin to Helen Hayes, Dean Martin, and Maureen Stapleton. The star power of this movie definitely helped it gain popularity and great acclaim. In fact, Airport the movie was nominated for ten Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best (Adapted) Screenplay. Helen Hayes won the 1970 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. (http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?PID=1143268&frm;=sh_google) Not only did this film spawn the “sequels” Airport 1975, Airport '77 and The Concorde - Airport ’79, but it was also the inspiration for a plethora of other disaster epics based on the same catastrophic premise. ((http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?PID=1143268&frm;=sh_google)

The great success of Airport in 1970 no doubt fueled further sales of this best-selling novel. The mere fact that the book itself translated so well into a film says much for its success as a best-seller. Books that follow this pattern historically are very successful best –sellers (ie: Jaws, The Godfather, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Angela’s Ashes, etc.)

It has been asserted that Arthur Hailey’s novels “have won popular acclaim because they elucidate clearly and simply some of the complex machinery of contemporary society and satisfy in melodramatic fashion the average reader’s desire for a well-packaged and entertaining story.” (Bevilacqua 261) This reason, combined with its translatability into film, its humanistic characters, and its follow-on trend with Hailey’s other novels all contribute to Airport’s success as an American best-seller. AIrport demonstrates an excellent melange of qualities that make prove to make an extremely popular book.

Bestsellers
Graduate School of Library and Information Science
Maintained by unsworth@uiuc.edu