Publisher Description
Ronald Radosh’s earliest memory is of being trundled off to a May Day demonstration by his Communist parents. Radosh grew up in the parallel universe of American Communism, and when he entered the University of Wisconsin in the late 1950s, he became a founding father of the New Left and emerged as one of its leaders in the sixties.
But if Commies is an intimate social history of the American Left over the past half-century, it is also a compelling story of a crisis of radical faith. In the early eighties, Radosh wrote the groundbreaking work The Rosenberg File, intending to prove that the martyrs were innocent—but after examining government files, he became convinced of the Rosenbergs’ guilt. As the publication of his book provoked attacks and blacklisting from his former friends in the Left, Radosh began to question his past allegiances.
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“Mr. Radosh begins as a red baby being strollered through NY’s May Day parade by his mother, and ends as a reformed commie, rebuked and ignored by some former friends disappointed in his turn of politics. The story of his change is most interesting. Reading his reasoning as he grew and learned what communism means and represents helps formulate my own thoughts. His education was an education for me. Well written and engrossing and well performed. Highly recommended. ”
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Bur (5 out of 5 stars)