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| About
the Book
1956:
coldest of Cold War years. In Budapest, Russian firing squads are
gunning down revolutionists. In Washington, Eisenhower is about to
defeat Stevenson's second bid for the presidency amid echoes of Joe
McCarthy's red menace ravings. And in Manhattan, Maxim Karpilov flirts
with a receptionist at the publisher's office where he writes
technical electronics manuals for the Army and Navy. Then, later that
day, two FBI agents threaten to have him fired as a security risk
unless he cooperates by joining the Communist Party to infiltrate it.
When Max refuses, the axe falls, his wife reacts with terror (Rosenbergs
electrocuted three years earlier), and his lover introduces him to an
associate of famed wealthy activist Corliss Lamont. Meantime, meager
savings dwindling, wife pregnant, Max soldiers on, landing work and
having his first affair as a married man. But when his immigrant
father gets hit with a deportation order back to the USSR in the very
same week that an old lefty solicits his help in creating a new
political party, Max begins to perceive the magnitude and terms of the
price he'll have to pay for the survival of them all.
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| About
the Author How much of Deadly Farce is
autobiographical, how much fiction? Don't ask Sidney Norinsky. He
insists readers are due no such differentiation, and that his career
does not parallel that of Max, the protagonist. What he does insist on
is the accuracy of his portrayal of the Fifties and, especially, how
public events affected anyone who stood in the way of the
military-industrial power Eisenhower warned about in 1961. Sidney
Norinsky writes fiction, journalism, and stage plays from his upstairs
study in the century old house on the side of a hill he shares with
his wife, painter Lynne Friedman, and a fat cat named Plum, one
hundred miles north of Manhattan. |
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