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The Plot Against America | 
enlarge | Author: Philip Roth Publisher: Vintage
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $2.72 You Save: $12.23 (82%)
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Rating: 399 reviews Sales Rank: 8907
Media: Paperback Pages: 416 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 1
ISBN: 1400079497 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781400079490 ASIN: 1400079497
Publication Date: September 27, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Shows definite wear, and perhaps considerable marking on inside. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to over one million happy customers. Your purchase benefits world literacy!
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Amazon.com Review "What if" scenarios are often suspect. They are sometimes thinly veiled tales of the gospel according to the author, taking on the claustrophobic air of a personal fantasia that can't be shared. Such is not the case with Philip Roth's tour de force, The Plot Against America. It is a credible, fully-realized picture of what could happen anywhere, at any time, if the right people and circumstances come together. The Plot Against America explores a wholly imagined thesis and sees it through to the end: Charles A. Lindbergh defeats FDR for the Presidency in 1940. Lindbergh, the "Lone Eagle," captured the country's imagination by his solo Atlantic crossing in 1927 in the monoplane, Spirit of St. Louis, then had the country's sympathy upon the kidnapping and murder of his young son. He was a true American hero: brave, modest, handsome, a patriot. According to some reliable sources, he was also a rabid isolationist, Nazi sympathizer, and a crypto-fascist. It is these latter attributes of Lindbergh that inform the novel. The story is framed in Roth's own family history: the family flat in Weequahic, the neighbors, his parents, Bess and Herman, his brother, Sandy and seven-year-old Philip. Jewishness is always the scrim through which Roth examines American contemporary culture. His detractors say that he sees persecution everywhere, that he is vigilant in "Keeping faith with the certainty of Jewish travail"; his less severe critics might cavil about his portrayal of Jewish mothers and his sexual obsession, but generally give him good marks, and his fans read every word he writes and heap honors upon him. This novel will engage and satisfy every camp. "Fear presides over these memories, a perpetual fear. Of course, no childhood is without its terrors, yet I wonder if I would have been a less frightened boy if Lindbergh hadn't been president or if I hadn't been the offspring of Jews." This is the opening paragraph of the book, which sets the stage and tone for all that follows. Fear is palpable throughout; fear of things both real and imagined. A central event of the novel is the relocation effort made through the Office of American Absorption, a government program whereby Jews would be placed, family by family, across the nation, thereby breaking up their neighborhoods--ghettos--and removing them from each other and from any kind of ethnic solidarity. The impact this edict has on Philip and all around him is horrific and life-changing. Throughout the novel, Roth interweaves historical names such as Walter Winchell, who tries to run against Lindbergh. The twist at the end is more than surprising--it is positively ingenious. Roth has written a magnificent novel, arguably his best work in a long time. It is tempting to equate his scenario with current events, but resist, resist. Of course it is a cautionary tale, but, beyond that, it is a contribution to American letters by a man working at the top of his powers. --Valerie Ryan
Product Description In an astonishing feat of empathy and narrative invention, our most ambitious novelist imagines an alternate version of American history. In 1940 Charles A. Lindbergh, heroic aviator and rabid isolationist, is elected President. Shortly thereafter, he negotiates a cordial “understanding” with Adolf Hitler, while the new government embarks on a program of folksy anti-Semitism.
For one boy growing up in Newark, Lindbergh’s election is the first in a series of ruptures that threaten to destroy his small, safe corner of America–and with it, his mother, his father, and his older brother.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 394 more reviews...
The plot against America, part 2 December 11, 2008 Dennis Y (Wheaton, Illinois USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
I love the implication that Republicans are nazi. I can't wait for "The Plot Against America, part 2" This is the one where FDR wins the election and vulnerable Individuals or as Stalin called them, "useful idiots" start to drag our country slowly toward Marxism. Oh wait, this is really happening.
it can happen here December 5, 2008 Tony Thomas (SUNNY ISLES BEACH, FL USA) Reading this book, I became the child I was in the 1950s, Black not Jewish, but aware of the example of what Hitler did, and fearful that it could happen again and in the United States. I read this book in a fever in two days, pushing aside work and literary obligations. Roth lives this. Roth presents us not only with the political science fiction, but an engaging protagonist who is coming into his teenage years trying to define himself in competition and love with his family, brother, mother, father, aunt, cousin, and fearing all of this and wonder what place he can have. This makes everything much more real and engaged me to read this book and fight its battles. Antisemitism has increaded in recent years as economic uncertainty has blossomed into the biggest international economic crisis since the Great Depression. As in the 1930s in Germany and as Roth points out in the US too, those who want to deflect the hatred of working people from the capitalist system, can try to pin the world's problems on the Jews, and like in Germany in the 1930s, fascist measures may be needed to suppress working people who want to snatch power out of the hnads of the capitalists billionaires to end such crises forever. However, in the 1930s and early 1940s the US and Germany and Japan were deadlocked in a race to war as their solution to the world economic crisis, regardless of policy toward fascism or the Jews. The conflict was over who would solve the economci crises by despoiling other imperialisms, especially who could take advantage of the weakness of French and British imperialism. The Republican convention that is fictionalized here reall signified the war determination of America's rulers. The most popular candidates for the Presidency who reflected the naition's opposition to going to war in their rhetoric were pushed aside and Wendell Wilkie, new to politics and until then a Democrat, was run for president because of his support for the war. Neither Wilike nor any of the Republicans protested when immediately after the election Roosevelt put the US into the war by launching a secret naval war against Germany and Italy and breaking US and International law to give massive military and economic aid to Britain. Anyway, this book is a good read. I could not put it down.
Great . . . up until the end November 24, 2008 N. Perz (St. Louis) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I bought this after hearing an interview with the author on NPR. I really liked it. Being a history-nerd, I was intrigued by the alternative-history aspect of Charles Lindbergh being president but that wasn't really the main point of the book. TPAM is a deeper look into fear and prejudice, and how disasters can creep up on you one step at a time. As the main character and his family (who are lower-middle class Jews living in New Jersey) experience this rising tide of anti-Semitism I had to wonder: is this what is was like for Jews in Germany those early years? Did they, too, think that it would pass and things would somehow get back to normal? Did they have blind faith that their "German-ness" would protect them in spite of their being Jews? TPAM was very interesting on several levels. My one major gripe (and the reason why I gave it only 4 stars) is that I think the ending was badly handled. I don't want to spoil it for anyone but the resolution seemed abrupt, contrived, and silly to the point of shattering the suspension of disbelief that Roth had worked so hard to create. Oh well... Recommended.
Gripping but disappointing ending November 19, 2008 Steven Hirsch (Maryland) This a very good novel with a very disappointing ending. I have no problem with the way Roth sets the novel up, using his own childhood and family as the main setting and characters. It makes the fictional elements seem real and historical to have them recounted through the memories of a child who was around 7 to 9 years old when the supposed events were occurring. As events unfold, the rise of Lindbergh, the gradually increasing pressure on Jewish-Americans, the sense of menace threatening his family, Roth exploits the tensions both within the family and from without. It's gripping, and then things go wrong. I expect characters to be at least somewhat consistent and yet Roth simply changes 2 important characters without much explanation. First, Alvin returns from the war but is no longer the clever, politically charged person who chose to go fight fascism seeming to have lost all interest in politics. Second, Sandy, Roth's older brother and Lindbergh admirer and defender, enters puberty and seems to lose every opinion he has held against all pressure from his family. As he's proven wrong in everything he used to believe no one even makes a single comment to him nor does he acknowledge his errors. But the worst thing is, after everything Lindbergh has done to change history, he simply disappears and everything turns out exactly as if he had never challenged Roosevelt and been elected President. Roosevelt returns to the White House, the US enters the war, the Axis is defeated and, seemingly, every post-war event proceeds to happen as though Lindbergh had never run for office. Rabbi Bengelsdorf's explanation of events, Lindbergh being blackmailed into his electoral campaign by Nazis threatening his kidnapped son's life, seems ludicrous. It makes Lindbergh and his wife traitors to their country. It also may seem to reduce Lindbergh's moral culpability, though treason would not be worse than the anti-semitism and subversion of the Constitution that Lindbergh endorsed either willingly or under duress. However, I still enjoyed the novel for Roth's vivid recreation of his family and Jewish life in Newark during the Depression and for its imaginative exploration of "it" happening here.
AS THE WORLD TURNS... November 3, 2008 Lawyeraau (Balmoral Castle) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I loved this book, as it was a wonderful melding of two genres, that of alternate history to that of family drama. Understandably, this book was touted as a New York Times Book Review Best Book of the Year. It is as gripping as it is moving, and the best book that I have read by this author, no doubt influenced by his own experiences growing up. The narrator, through whose eyes we see events in the book unfold, even bears the author's name. This is a look at an America from 1940 to 1942 through the memories of young Philip Roth who lives with his working class family in a Jewish enclave in Newark, New Jersey. All is well with the world, and his childhood seems to be otherwise unremarkable until Charles A. Lindbergh, `aviator extraordinaire and suspected Nazi sympathizer, decides to run for President against a bellicose Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR). Promising to keep the nation out of war, while FDR sees war as an eventuality, Lindbergh seizes the moment. His platform is simply that one has two choices. Vote for Lindbergh or vote for war. Given that choice, Americans vote overwhelmingly for Lindbergh. Once he becomes president, Lindbergh keeps his promise and keeps America out of war, reaching a detente with Hitler that allows Hitler to continue his world wide conquest without fear of reprisal from America. For Philip Roth, however, the election of Lindbergh irrevocably changes his world, as there are signs that Lindbergh thinks that Jews are not quite American enough, and nation wide programs are established to begin a sort of resettlement of Jews in order to help integrate them into mainstream America. The Lindbergh presidency would have a great affect on Philip and his family, with collaboration and resistance taking place all around him. What happened in America under Lindbergh would parallel in small part what was going on with the Jews of Europe. In this alternate history, Walter Winchell would rise up on behalf of the Jews as a voice that would be heard and would not be silenced. Moreover, as to why Lindbergh would take America in this direction is explained in a surprising and astonishing ending This is an interesting and though provoking cautionary tale that will keep the reader turning the pages. Well-written with memorable, well drawn characters and a plot that is riveting, it is a bold, brash book that simply demands to be read.
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