David Maraniss' 6 Favorite Books on the Red Scare

David Maraniss' 6 Favorite Books on the Red Scare
AP Photo/File

The Washington Post's David Maraniss is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and a best-selling biographer. His new book, A Good American Family, revisits the Red Scare era by telling the story of his father's blacklisting.

Spain in Our Hearts by Adam Hochschild (2016).

Hochschild offers a vivid and heartbreaking history that evokes the idealism and violence of the Spanish Civil War through stories of American volunteers and journalists. This largely forgotten war is essential to understanding the ideological struggles that played out during World War II and the Red Scare. Read Hochschild's account in tandem with George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia.

The Crucible by Arthur Miller (1953).

The playwright's dramatic re-enactment of the Salem witch trials is a study in the manipulation of fear and hysteria, which he saw recurring during the McCarthy era. Years after Miller wrote the timeless play, he was cited by the House Un-American Activities Committee for refusing to name names — life imitating art imitating life.

Naming Names by Victor Navasky (1980).

A troubling account of why witnesses called before HUAC informed on friends and associates, and how that affected their lives and the lives of those they named. I also recommend Witness, the memoir of perhaps the most famous ex-­Communist informer, Whittaker Chambers, and Inside Out, a moving memoir by screenwriter Walter Bernstein, who endured the blacklist.

Read Full Article »


Comment
Show comments Hide Comments
You must be logged in to comment.
Register


Related Articles

Popular in the Community