Book description
National Bestseller ⢠One of the year's most acclaimed works of nonfiction ⢠A Best Book of 2022: New York Times, Washington Post, New Yorker, Chicago Tribune, Kirkus
From legendary historian Adam Hochschild, a "masterly" (New York Times) reassessment of the overlooked but startlingly resonant period between World War IâŚ
Why read it?
4 authors picked American Midnight as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I found Hochschildâs narrative of the aftermath of World War I in America to be especially timely and provocative. Hochschild shows that while we remember the early 1920s as one of triumph and the beginning of the âJazz Age,â in many areas, democracy was in short supply, and the nation was on the brink of a terrifying future.
At times, this book reads like a dystopian novel, but it is all too real.
From Tracy's list on the contested history of democracy.
I read this book as part of my background reading for my recent book, Justice for All. In Hochschildâs telling, American exceptionalismâthe nationâs self-perception as a shining âcity on a hillââfoundered in the post-World War I era when socialists and, basically, anyone who undermined social norms and customs was suppressed in extraordinary acts of violence.
Given current efforts to whitewash American history, this book is a must-read for anyone interested in the unvarnished truth about our nationâs past.
From Michael's list on reveal historyâs obscure, enlightening backstories.
This nonfiction picture of a âforgotten crisis,â the hysterical extremism in America surrounding World War I, is so packed with shocking information I finished it in a fury, thinking, âEveryone must read this book.â
As daily news reports strike so many these days with the sense that things have never been worse, I believe that we need to know more about history, understand the antecedents of our troubles, and learn from the brave men and women who fought evil and folly in the past.
The book presents so many parallels to todayâs threats to democracy, some even more deadly thanâŚ
If you love American Midnight...
One of the great historians of our time just published the best overview of this period we have yet and it places the Red Scare and Red Summer (widespread attacks on Black communities on an unprecedented scale) of 1919 at the center of its 1917-1921 sweep. We get a great picture of how the World War I home front escalated repression and the U.S. connections to an explosive international situation during and after the war, including the Russian Revolution.
From Adam's list on the U.S. Red Scare of the Russian Revolution and WWI era.
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