The remarkable story of the American volunteers who fought in the Spanish Civil War.
Section - i: List of Maps Section - ii: Author's Note Introduction - iii: Prologue: Far from Home Chapter - 1: Chasing Moneychangers from the Temple Chapter - 2: Promised Land, Black Wings Chapter - 3: "Those Who Do Not Think as We Do" Chapter - 4: A New Heaven and Earth Chapter - 5: "I Will Destroy Madrid" Chapter - 6: "Don't Try to Catch Me" Chapter - 7: Rifles from the 1860s Chapter - 8: Over the Mountains Chapter - 9: Civil War at the Times Chapter - 10: The Man Who Loved Dictators Chapter - 11: Devil's Bargain Chapter - 12: "I Don't Think I Would Write about That If I Were You" Chapter - 13: "As Good a Method of Getting Married as Any Other" Chapter - 14: Texaco Goes to War Chapter - 15: "In My Book You'll Be an American" Chapter - 16: "A Letter to My Novia" Chapter - 17: "Only a Few Grains of Sand Left in the Hourglass" Chapter - 18: At the River's Edge Chapter - 19: A Change of Heart? Chapter - 20: Gambling for Time Chapter - 21: The Taste of Tears Chapter - 22: Kaddish Acknowledgements - iv: Acknowledgements Section - iv: Notes Section - v: Bibliography Section - vi: Photo Credits Index - vii: Index Acknowledgements - viii: Permissions Acknowledgements
Adam Hochschild is an award-winning author of seven books, mostly on subjects related to human rights. King Leopold's Ghost was the winner of the prestigious Duff Cooper Prize and Bury the Chains was longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize. He lives in San Francisco and teaches at the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley.
Hochschild’s contribution lies in the storytelling, his sure
command of military history, and his beautiful sense of private
hurt, which together yield original insight. An astute observer of
contrasts, he navigates the hairpin turns between intimacy and
barbarism, euphoria and despair, naivety and cynicism. The book
effortlessly hopscotches from global history to individual – and
emotional – experience.
*Guardian*
While Hochschild focuses on volunteers such as Berg, he doesn't
ignore the war's local dynamic and global dimensions. What makes
the book so effective, however, is his decision to explore these
complexities through a set of interwoven biographies . . .
Hochschild tells nuanced tales of political awakenings and
disillusionment, but also steadfast ethical commitment. He never
descends into easy moralising.
*BBC History Magazine*
Beautifully written with a hawk-eye for the telling anecdote, Spain
in Our Hearts constitutes an endlessly fascinating and utterly
unputdownable survey of the war to defend democracy in Spain that
was not only the first act of the Second World War but also, for
many across the world, the last great cause.
*Paul Preston, author of The Spanish Civil War: Reaction,
Revolution, and Revenge*
Spain in Our Hearts is narrative non-fiction at its very best.
Hochschild's achievement is to make this trial-by-combat story come
alive, as if it were happening now. It is impossible for a reader
not to identify and feel compassion for those sons and daughters of
America who risked and often gave their lives for a cause that
could not ultimately prevail against the darker forces of Franco,
Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin - and Texaco. A seamlessly-woven,
unputdownable tapestry of war in Europe; intensely, unforgettably
moving.
*Nigel Hamilton, author of The Mantle of Command*
Adam Hochschild weaves a brilliant tapestry of colorful characters
into a story that includes the young Ernest Hemmingway, the
charismatic Robert Merriman, the scotch-drinking Milly Bennett, the
glamorous reporter Virginia Cowles, and dozens of other Americans
whose lives were dramatically altered by the Spanish Civil War.
Hochschild's poignant narrative evokes E.L. Doctorow's great
historical novel Ragtime-but Spain in Our Hearts is no novel but a
tragic true story about a critical tipping point in the 20th
century's slide into total warfare. Passionate, evocative, and
gracefully written
*Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Good
Spy*
George Orwell once explained that going to Spain, in 1936, 'seemed
the only conceivable thing to do.' As soon as he got there, the
right thing to do got a lot less clear. And how to write about it
was immediately difficult, too. The twenty-eight hundred Americans
who fought in the Spanish Civil War felt the same way, as Adam
Hochschild recounts in this rich and fascinating book. Few writers
grapple so powerfully with the painful moral and ethical choices of
past actors as does Hochschild, who brings to Spain in Our Hearts
his exceptional talents - and his moral seriousness - as a
reporter, as a historian, and as a writer.
*Jill Lepore, author of The Secret History of Wonder
Woman*
In this beautifully written portrait of Americans caught up in the
Spanish Civil War, Adam Hochschild brings to brilliant life the
heroism and horror of that fratricidal conflict. His account of the
David-and-Goliath fight between the ragtag army of idealistic,
pro-democracy volunteers and the mechanized, murderous forces of
Franco, Hitler, and Mussolini is one of the most powerful
narratives I have ever read.
*Lynne Olson, author of Citizens of London*
[An] excellent portrait of the war and of the men and women drawn
to Spain ... It is Hochschild's vivid account of what these people
witnessed that gives his book its edge. Many other writers have
described the Americans who went to Spain, but few have brought to
their accounts such an enjoyable and balanced mixture of history
and personal narrative ... Hochschild is good at conveying the
barbarity on both sides without letting it swamp the story ...
fascinating.
*Literary Review*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |