Ratings2
Average rating3.5
Historical novel about the competing claims of faith, love, and politics during the McCarthy era. Washington, D.C., early 1950s: a world of bare-knuckled ideology, hard drinking, and secret dossiers, dominated by such outsized characters as Richard Nixon, Drew Pearson, Perle Mesta, and Joe McCarthy. Timothy Laughlin, recent Fordham graduate and devout Catholic eager to join the crusade against Communism, meets a handsome, profligate State Department official, Hawkins Fuller, leading to Tim's first job and--after Fuller's advances--his first love affair. Now, as McCarthy mounts an increasingly desperate bid for power and internal investigations focus on "sexual subversives" in the government, Tim and Fuller find it ever more dangerous to navigate their double lives. The novel moving between the Senate Office Building and the Washington Evening Star, the diplomatic world of Foggy Bottom and NATO's front line in Europe, energized by political drama, unexpected humor and heartbreak.--From publisher description.
Reviews with the most likes.
Mallon's latest novel is an engaging love story that is set in the '50s but has implications into the '90s and beyond. It isn't truly literary–the language will not be memorable–but its setting of a homosexual affair in the turbulent times of the McCarthy era is fascinating. How did some survive and others did not? It's not going to appeal to the Christian right, but for the rest of us its themes of forbidden love and idealogical zeal will give us something to think about.
I had to read this before watching the tv show because the tv show trailer looked really good!
It was so hard to finish this book, no shade to the author, but I don't recommend this for the baddies bad at history/politics