ADAM HOCHSCHILD is the author of eleven books. King Leopold's Ghost was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, as was To End All Wars. His Bury the Chains was a finalist for the National Book Award and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and PEN USA Literary Award. He lives in Berkeley, California.
“A harrowing portrait of America in 1917–21, rife with racist
violence, xenophobia and political repression abetted by the
federal government. The book serves as a cautionary tale and a
provocative counterpoint to our own era.” — New York Times Book
Review, Editors' Choice
“The post-WWI ‘red scare’ was the most vicious period of violent
repression in U.S. history, apart from the two original sins
[slavery and ‘Indian removal’]. The shocking story is recounted in
vivid detail in Adam Hochschild’s penetrating study American
Midnight.” — Noam Chomsky, Truthout
“Hochschild’s masterful new book ... chronicles our nation’s
horrific period from 1917–21, when Woodrow Wilson, his men, and a
paranoid culture went to war against union activists, immigrants,
resisters, and Black people, among others—on a level that should
forever shatter any myth about American Exceptionalism. A
cautionary tale of what happens when democracy goes off the rails.”
— Will Bunch, Philadelphia Inquirer
"Adam Hochschild has written a fine book about a grim period a
century ago that has largely disappeared from national memory but
seems painfully relevant to America in the 2020s... [It] describes
vividly a time when racism, white nationalism, and anti-foreign and
anti-immigrant sentiment were rampant. Reading it is almost
therapeutic. Realizing (thanks to this book) that American
democracy survived that dark moment and a decade later began half a
century of democratic renewal made this reader more hopeful than he
has been in quite a while.” — Washington Post
"The four years of American history from 1917 to 1921 are
underexamined, but, in this account, they emerge as pivotal." — New
Yorker
“In American Midnight, the historian Adam Hochschild, celebrated
for his King Leopold’s Ghost and other volumes, recounts it with
verve and insight… one of several fresh looks at a period that had
previously received little widespread attention...Hochschild
narrates a time as unsettled, frightening, and (perhaps)
transformative as our own.”
— Boston Globe
“Brilliant historian Adam Hochschild … takes on the echoing years —
a century ago — when pandemic and fire-stoking politicians buckled
society." — Chicago Tribune
“A sweeping look at the years between World War I and the Roaring
Twenties, when conscientious objectors to the war were maltreated
and conflicts over race and labor were at a high pitch. Hochschild
draws direct lines between events of that time and the unrest of
today.”
— New York Times, 15 Works of Nonfiction to Read This Fall
“Exceptionally well written, impeccably organized, and filled with
colorful, fully developed historical characters. … A riveting,
resonant account of the fragility of freedom in one of many
shameful periods in U.S. history.” — Kirkus
Reviews (starred review)
“A chilling tale laid out with engaging storytelling and meticulous
detail.” — Los Angeles Times
"Expanding his history begun in To End All Wars (2011), Hochschild
brings to light people and themes that are often mere footnotes in
other records of the Great War.”
— Booklist (starred review)
“Meticulously researched, fluidly written, and frequently enraging,
this is a timely reminder of the ‘vigilant respect for civil rights
and Constitutional safeguards’ needed to protect democracy and
forestall authoritarianism.” — Publishers Weekly (starred
review)
“During the United States’ current tumultuous times, it is
important to remember and revisit the forgotten injustices of the
previous century. Hochschild succinctly does so here.” — Library
Journal (starred review)
“Award-winning historian Adam Hochschild (King Leopold's
Ghost, To End All Wars and Bury the Chains) provides
a timely, fast-paced, revelatory new account of a pivotal but
neglected period in American history: World War I and its stormy
aftermath, when bloodshed and repression on the home front nearly
doomed American democracy. The period's toxic currents of racism,
nativism, red-baiting, and contempt for the rule of law feel
ominously familiar today.” — Shelf Awareness
"The most useful books offer clarity on issues that have animated
debate for years. For example, Adam Hochschild’s American
Midnight, a broad account of the aftermath of the U.S. joining the
First World War, highlights the nativist sentiment that
radicalized some Americans against immigrants then, just as it does
today." — Kate Cray, The Atlantic
"An account of the U.S. after World War I, when hatred, violence,
racism, and economic uncertainty threatened democracy. The
parallels with today's world are terrifying." — Isabel Allende,
Daily Mail (London), "Best Reads of the Year"
“American Midnight is a potent reminder of what happens when open
discourse is systemically punished. The story happens to be more
than 100 years old, which doesn’t mean it can’t happen again." —
San Francisco Chronicle
"A terrific new account of America’s social and political turmoil
during the 1910s and ’20s provides some much-needed perspective on
the problems afflicting the country today. ... Like all the best
history books, American Midnight reads like a novel with
three-dimensional characters." — Quillette
"This is undoubtedly one of the year’s best and most important
histories." — AudioFile Magazine
"A grim (but ultimately hopeful) account of how American democracy
survived the dark period between 1917 and 1921 when racism,
anti-immigrant sentiment and dangerous white nationalism swelled
following the Great War." — Globe and Mail (Toronto), "Best Books
to Give This Year"
"Hochschild forces readers to confront the abuses and remember
those who had the courage to fight against militarism and speak up
for the powerless and dispossessed. ... Vivid." — Financial
Times
"If you often worry about the political polarization of the 2020s,
you should pick up historian Adam Hochschild’s clear-eyed and
elegantly written new book covering the years surrounding World War
I. This period of U.S. history is often glanced over and yet, as
Hochschild observes, it was a time with more than a few echoes of
the current moment." — Fast Company
"The latest of Adam Hochschild's remarkably good books. ... No one
who reads Adam Hochschild's admirable but sombre book will feel
quite the same about the land of the free." — Times Literary
Supplement (London)
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