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U.S. Authors - 20th Century - Literary Biography, Communists - Biography, Communists & Socialists - Political Biography
Being Red: A Memoir by Howard Fast β€” book cover

Being Red: A Memoir

by Howard Fast
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Overview

Being Red is an intimate memoir of an extraordinary time--the years Howard Fast, one of our nation's most popular authors, spent in the American Communist Party, and under the constant surveillance of the FBI. 8-page photo insert.

Synopsis

Being Red is an intimate memoir of an extraordinary time--the years Howard Fast, one of our nation's most popular authors, spent in the American Communist Party, and under the constant surveillance of the FBI. 8-page photo insert.

Publishers Weekly

Fast, still astonishingly prolific and frequently bestselling at 75, was catapulted to early fame by such books as Freedom Road and Citizen Tom Paine . He joined the Communist Party in 1944, at the height of U.S.-Soviet wartime amity, and in the ensuing Cold War paranoia found his life torn apart. Though hailed overseas as a successful writer who stood against McCarthyite hysteria, his name and books became anathema at home. Here he tells the remarkable story of how, when all the major U.S. publishers backed away from his Spartacus , he brought it out himself, with only a small, courageous order from the Doubleday chain--to see it eventually become a multimillion-copy seller and a celebrated movie. Fast does not regret his 13 years of party membership, and in that is refreshingly different from the many who later sourly recanted. Critical of party leadership, dogmatism and its unswerving idealization of the Soviet Union, he nevertheless argues convincingly that most American members were compassionate people who cared deeply for their country while deploring its racism and dog-eat-dog ethics; the idea that they could be, or wanted to be, a threat to national security is ludicrous to him. Fast describes this passage in his life like the master storyteller he is, and his insights into the failure of American communism make his book valuable as well as highly entertaining. (Nov.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Fast, still astonishingly prolific and frequently bestselling at 75, was catapulted to early fame by such books as Freedom Road and Citizen Tom Paine . He joined the Communist Party in 1944, at the height of U.S.-Soviet wartime amity, and in the ensuing Cold War paranoia found his life torn apart. Though hailed overseas as a successful writer who stood against McCarthyite hysteria, his name and books became anathema at home. Here he tells the remarkable story of how, when all the major U.S. publishers backed away from his Spartacus , he brought it out himself, with only a small, courageous order from the Doubleday chain--to see it eventually become a multimillion-copy seller and a celebrated movie. Fast does not regret his 13 years of party membership, and in that is refreshingly different from the many who later sourly recanted. Critical of party leadership, dogmatism and its unswerving idealization of the Soviet Union, he nevertheless argues convincingly that most American members were compassionate people who cared deeply for their country while deploring its racism and dog-eat-dog ethics; the idea that they could be, or wanted to be, a threat to national security is ludicrous to him. Fast describes this passage in his life like the master storyteller he is, and his insights into the failure of American communism make his book valuable as well as highly entertaining. (Nov.)

Library Journal

Passionately, artlessly, and with winning personal candor, Fast tells of his lower-class Bronx childhood, World War II work for Voice of America, disillusioning journalistic travels in the Third World, and activities in the Communist Party, to which he remained doggedly loyal until 1957. The book offers an invaluable account of a spirited fighter for the underdog whose prolific writing career was early caught between the paranoid cruelty of his own government and the ideological rigidity of the Communist leadership. While the basic outlines of his story are familiar, the vivid details are immensely revealing. Indispensable to the growing body of literature on America's terrifying postwar Red Scare. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 7/1/90.-- Charles C. Nash, Nevada, Mo.

Booknews

Reprint of the autobiography of a popular novelist, originally published by Houghton Mifflin in 1990. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
December 1, 1994
Publisher
Sharpe, M. E. Inc.
Pages
392
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781563244995

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