book data
874 ratings,
3.91
average rating, 99 reviews
(more data...)
edit
published
January 12th 1984
by Modern Library
(first published 1971)
details
Hardcover, 303 pages
isbn
0394605012
(isbn13: 9780394605012)
description
The central figure of this novel is a young man whose parents were executed for conspiring to steal atomic secrets for Russia.
His name is Daniel Isaac…more
His name is Daniel Isaac…more
find at:
Amazon • WorldCat • more options…
There is a good chance some of your friends read this book. Sign in to see!
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The History Book ...: TRIVIA AND HUMOR | 75 | 87 | Feb 11, 2010 10:18AM |
friend reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists.
Add this book to your favorite list »
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1,344)
All ratings
|
5 stars (265)
|
4 stars (337)
|
3 stars (206)
|
2 stars (58)
|
1 star (8)
|
avg 3.91
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in December, 2008
Well, the style was certainly a shock to me, as I typically read the classic romantics. I had just finished reading "Death in Venice" prior to this book, where even abhorable acts suck as pedophilia are presented in such a passive way, and with such tact, that they almost seem respectable, or at least understandable. So the overtly upfront sexuality (male dominant sexuality) and courseness of this book sort of smacked me upside the head at first. Once I adjusted I did begin to enjoy ...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
2 comments
I'd never read any Doctorow, but I got curious about this book after reading a Book Forum article about politics and the novel and why so few American writers don't touch politics in their work. There are understandable fears, no doubt, about ideology and heavy-handedness. Whatever. The BF article held The Book of Daniel up as exemplary and I have to say I agree. This was fantastic. It's a fictional account of the Rosenberg's (American Communist Party members convicted of intent to spy and sente...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
2 comments
Read in March, 2001
Ficitional account of the events surrounding Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Although this book was written much later, it was assigned as part of my "Law and Literature" class in law school to represent the period of the 1950s and it could not have been a better choice.
So many people think of the 1950s in America with such fondness as a simpler time wherre things were great for everyone. Well, not really. It certainly wasn't so great if you were black and it certainly was n...more
So many people think of the 1950s in America with such fondness as a simpler time wherre things were great for everyone. Well, not really. It certainly wasn't so great if you were black and it certainly was n...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
I loved the prose style, and the subject matter was heavy and riviting, but this book suffered from having an utterly unlikeable narrator and from that irritating brand of misogyny that one so often sees in the writing of progressives in that era. Every woman in this book, including the narrator's mother and sister, is described in terms of her fuckability. And let's not forget the sexual violence!
I suppose this is supposed to make the narrator levels of complexity, a tortured aspec...more
I suppose this is supposed to make the narrator levels of complexity, a tortured aspec...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in December, 2009
This is the third Doctorow book that I've started, and the second finished - albeit after dragging my heels. (I enjoyed The March, but gave up on The Waterworks.) The narration of the book feels like a collage, or what the files of a dissertation would read like if someone else tried to assemble the various pieces. Bits and pieces of outlines and paragraphs, with the barest of transitions linking them together. Narration switches from first person to third person and briefly to another first...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in May, 2009
This book was tucked away in a corner of the library, and I believe I was the first person to check it out since 1993. The first lines describing a young family hitchhiking to a mental institution grabbed me, and I was quickly sucked into this story about the adult orphans of members of the Communist Party who were imprisoned and then executed based on trumped up charges of espionage during the Red Scare of the 1940s and 50s. The best parts of this book describe the U.S. justice system from a ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Brilliant. One of the best books written about the "event" that was the Rosenbergs (read with Kushner's "Angels in America" and [for a heaping of sardonic satire] Coover's _The Public Burning_). Doctorow draws us into questions of self, nation, and other that feel particularly relevant during this time of "patriot acts." A must-read for anyone interested in postwar American lit.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in September, 2009
This book reminds me a lot of Philip Roth in that there are a lot of superfluous facts and information. The novel has a very scattered structure that takes away from the plot of the story. It’s moving, and often times startling. Various scenes from the book are haunting, some that I won’t soon forget. I don’t know if this is a necessary read for anyone. I appreciate Ragtime a lot more and would definitely recommend that book over this one. Doctorow fails to develop his characters, th...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2008
This is a favorite book of all time. God its good. Based on the true story of the Rosenberg's,executed in the 1950's for selling US secrets to the Soviet Union after a very unfair trial and without hard evidence. Told from the perspective of their son, Daniel, who of course is truely screwed up in the head. I love Doctorow's ability to slip into many different voices. I also think it was daring of Doctorow to write this novel less than 15 years after the executions- it must have still been a pol...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in September, 2009
favorite passage (rather, the end of it): "Doctors still have a lot to learn about why we reject our hearts. Yes, doctors have a lot to learn. An old peddler from Delancey Street received a new heart at Mt. Sinai and spit it out moments after regaining consciousness. That's what we call heart ejection. A black postman in Pittsburgh, Ohio, received the heart of a white steelworker killed in a bar brawl. The black man died immediately. That's what we call heart dejection. Medical Science has ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in November, 2005
recommends it for:
Everyone, especially those who enjoy political novels
This is one of my all-time favorite books. I've read it at least four times and have enjoyed it more with every read. This book causes one to question what it is to be American--what are our principles and how do we stand by them or abandon them during times of international uncertainty. In Doctorow's fictionalized version of the Rosenberg case, he clearly takes the liberal side of things and implies that the Rosebergs (here, Isaacsons) weren't actually guilty of anything, but instead used as sc...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in September, 2009
Born of a particular time in history, Doctorow's novel vividly paints the world in the summer of 1967 and the McCarthy era. Doctorow tells of the children of the Rosenberg-like Isaacsons as they struggle to find their way in the counter-cultural revolution in opposition to a culture they were markedly excluded from. The book lacks the power it must have had at original publication. Nonetheless, it has some interesting things to say about the lies we tell ourselves about our own importance.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in October, 2009
As always am awed by Doctorow, a really really good writer! This is a must-read, fictionalized account of the Rosenberg trials and executions and the America of the 50's and 60's told through eyes of their son Daniel. Heartbreaking scenes of the two children shuffled to foster homes and shelters, courtrooms and prison visits.
I well remember the nite of the actual executions, June 1953, and my parents' somber looks and subdued conversation with friends, sitting on a park bench in our Bron...more
I well remember the nite of the actual executions, June 1953, and my parents' somber looks and subdued conversation with friends, sitting on a park bench in our Bron...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
any history/political junkie... or anyone else
"Obviously there are political implications."
A stray, but emblematic sentence, from this fascinating chronicle of America as seen through the tributaries of its most prestigious and threatening institutions.
This novel tells the tale of the infamous Rosenberg trial/execution(s), through the lens of their son, Daniel, who is dealt with the hardest hand of trying to “make sense” of and understand not only the death of his parents, but the country in which he ...more
A stray, but emblematic sentence, from this fascinating chronicle of America as seen through the tributaries of its most prestigious and threatening institutions.
This novel tells the tale of the infamous Rosenberg trial/execution(s), through the lens of their son, Daniel, who is dealt with the hardest hand of trying to “make sense” of and understand not only the death of his parents, but the country in which he ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
I hated this book while I was reading it but now that I have a little perspective I can appreciate what it's trying to do. I just can see past most of the bullshit. Daniel is a Charlie, and I've gone beyond the surface level of mind-twisting academic snarkiness with him, so I don't really buy how Daniel (and arguably Doctorow) tries to put off his readers. Doctorow treats well with political extremism, though.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
A novel, but written from the point of view of a fictional son of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Conveys the horror of capital punishment, the suffering of the children of the executed. But it also strongly makes the point that decisions matter, that any of the decisions we have made (the cold war, for instance) might have been different.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in July, 2009
Interested to read more about the Rosenbergs now. Good evaluation of the political climate of the time. Decent writing. Interesting perspective. Wanders quite a bit into stuff that doesn't have a thing to do with story, just reinforces that Daniel is messed up in the head. OK, that's a given. Was expecting a bit more.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2005
With Billy Bathgate and Ragtime the most popular of the Doctorow library, the casual read (i.e. non-Doctorw die-hard) may not have gotten to this one. I suggest those who like Doctorow make sure they pick up this one and give it a read. Be prepared for the fact that it's can be dark and haunting at times.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
I should have liked this story more, but it's a bit depressing. It's the tale of the children of the Rosenbergs, the couple executed for spying for Russia during the Cold War. An excellent book with some tour-de-force writing by Doctorow, but the subject isn't happy flowers.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 1996
I read this in college for a literature survey course about family dynamics. It was my first exposure to this author and I must say that I was fairly impressed. I was completely unfamiliar with the true story that lay underneath the fiction and appreciated the exposure.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
3 trivia questions
See trivia...
to-read
(on 340 people's shelves)
fiction (on 52 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 23 people's shelves)
1001 (on 12 people's shelves)
1001-books (on 9 people's shelves)
historical-fiction (on 9 people's shelves)
novels (on 8 people's shelves)
1001-books-to-read-before-you-die (on 7 people's shelves)
history (on 4 people's shelves)
More shelves...
fiction (on 52 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 23 people's shelves)
1001 (on 12 people's shelves)
1001-books (on 9 people's shelves)
historical-fiction (on 9 people's shelves)
novels (on 8 people's shelves)
1001-books-to-read-before-you-die (on 7 people's shelves)
history (on 4 people's shelves)
More shelves...
































