Reds

The Tragedy of American Communism
by Maurice Isserman
$35.00

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"The wisest, most eloquent history of the Communist Party USA that has ever been written" (Michael Kazin, author of What It Took to Win), revealing how party members contributed to struggles for justice and equality in America even as they championed a brutal, totalitarian state, the USSR  
 
After generations...
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Published By Basic Books

Format Hardback

Category

Number Of Pages 384

Publication Date 06/04/2024

ISBN 9781541620032

Dimensions 6.45 inches x 9.65 inches


"History is splendidly covered in Reds."—Wall Street Journal

"Reds succeeds in providing the most up-to-date and authoritative single-volume history of the Communist Party available...Isserman has produced what is probably the closest  one could come to a consensus history of the party....Isserman's book can serve as an informative introduction to the history of the Communist movement in the United States."—Jacobin

"A trenchant, decades-overdue book on the history of the U.S. Communist Party."—Foreign Policy

"Maurice Isserman is of the pre-eminent historians of the American left, having previously authored a history of the U.S. Communist Party (CPUSA) during World War II, a biography of DSA founder Michael Harrington, and Dorothy Healey’s memoirs, for which he provided commentary. His new history, Reds: The Tragedy of American Communism, provides a lucid, succinct, yet comprehensive history of the party, at once sympathetic and scathingly critical, as befits such a bewilderingly contradictory institution and mindset."—American Prospect

"What Maurice Isserman has accomplished in this well-written and superb history of the American Communist Party is a fresh assessment that will force many who have previously studied the party to revise some views."—The Bulkwark

“In highly readable prose, Isserman offers an evenhanded account of the party’s history from 1900 through 2000, providing just enough background and historical context to make the book accessible to a wide audience...this book is a deeply informed and largely persuasive account of the history of American communism that will serve as a valuable resource for historians and their students, and the wider public.”—Americal Historical Review

"How could blind disciples of Joseph Stalin also have been among the most dedicated fighters for unions and against racism in their nation? Maurice Isserman has not just produced the wisest, most eloquent history of the Communist Party that has ever been written. Reds is also vital reading for anyone who wants to understand the promise and agony of the American left in the twentieth century.—Michael Kazin, author of What It Took to Win

“In Reds, Isserman recognizes the fundamental contradiction at the heart of American Communism: a movement that recruited idealists and professed a commitment to democratic ideals, but also provided several hundred recruits for Soviet espionage and voluntarily tied itself to a totalitarian regime hostile to democracy. Isserman’s brisk account of the Party’s history from 1919 to the early 1990s is the best one-volume book on the most important radical organization of twentieth-century America.”—Harvey Klehr, Emory University

“Isserman’s all-too-aptly subtitled Reds: The Tragedy of American Communism is indeed a classic in the Greek mode. Nuanced, judicious, and elegantly written, this wide-ranging story of a doomed movement places it within the broader context of a turbulent twentieth century. Highlighting the inherent contradiction between the Communist Party’s once dynamic contributions to American life and its obeisance to the Soviet Union, Isserman offers a sobering reminder of how blind partisanship can blight the best efforts of those who seek a better world.”—Ellen Schrecker, Yeshiva University

 
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