All the Right Enemies
All the Right Enemies: The Life and Murder of Carlo Tresca is a 1988 biography of Italian-American anarchist Carlo Tresca by Dorothy Gallagher.
First edition | |
Editor | Dorothy Gallagher |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Subject | Non-fiction, Biography |
Published | 1988 (Rutgers University Press) |
Media type | Print (hardback, paperback) |
Pages | 321 |
ISBN | 9780813513102 |
OCLC | 17225359 |
Reception
The New York Review of Books called All the Right Enemies a "cool, almost laconic, recital", and wrote "it reads like an inspired police report. Yet her restraint serves to enhance the violence and passion of the events she recounts."[1]
All the Right Enemies has also been reviewed by Publishers Weekly,[2] Italian Americana magazine,[3] Kirkus Reviews,[4] Commentary,[5] Dissent,[6] Washington Monthly,[7] The Nation,[8] and The Journal of American History.[9]
It was a 1988 New York Times Notable Book of the Year.[10]
gollark: No.
gollark: GTech™ Melon Site-7741.
gollark: It directly pulls information about instructions from the dicts defining how the ISA is interpreted.
gollark: My assembler is, on the plus side, actually kind of slightly good now?
gollark: *Seriously*?
References
- Daniel Aaron (June 15, 1989). "Who Killed Carlo Tresca?". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- "All the Right Enemies: The Life and Murder of Carlo Tresca". Publishers Weekly. PWxyz LLC. November 3, 1988. Retrieved May 1, 2017.
This first biography of Tresca is levelheaded and exhaustively researched.
- Daniel Georianna (1990). "Reviews: All the Right Enemies: The Life and Murder of Carlo Tresca". Italian Americana. City University of New York. 9 (1): 93–97. JSTOR 29776078.
- "All the Right Enemies: The Life and Murder of Carlo Tresca". Kirkus Media LLC. Retrieved May 1, 2017.
Gallagher's own efforts to include gossip, love affairs, emotional states all fall flat. All the details are here, but they never crystallize into a compelling story until the book's shorter second part, the unraveling of Tresca's murder. In all, a stolid, reportorial history.
- Stephan Schwartz (November 1, 1988). "Political Murder (subscription required)". Commentary. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- "From a Heroic Past". Dissent. University of Pennsylvania Press: 409, 410. 1989. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- Harvey Klehr (November 1988). "Political Booknotes". Washington Monthly: 59. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- Maurice Isserman (October 10, 1988). "Threads of Conspiracy". The Nation: 322, 323. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- "All the Right Enemies". The Journal of American History. Organization of American Historians. 76 (2): 647. September 1989. doi:10.2307/1908091. JSTOR 1908091.
- "Christmas Books; Notable Books of the Year". New York Times. March 4, 2001. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
A first-class book, extraordinarily well researched
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.