One of the most influential books on Joe McCarthy, Richard Rovere's biography seems, somehow, both dated and valuable today. Certainly Rovere, a journalist who knew McCarthy well and covered his time in Washington, provides a valuable portrait of the climate of hysteria and recrimination wrought by McCarthy's charges; certainly he gives interesting views of McCarthy's personal style, a broad, bullying bonhomie that could be used to flatter or destroy colleagues, officials and reporters as he saw fit. Yet Rovere often seems content to spin facile, simplistic views of McCarthy: he portrays him as a shallow opportunist with no interest in Communism, nor an understanding of what his actions wrought, manipulated by others (Catholic officials, conservative millionaires, anticommunist reporters) into a crusade that wasn't his. This is so shallow a depiction of its subject that it's barely worth remarking on after more thorough biographies by Herman, Oshinsky and Reeves; nor does Rovere's peddling long-debunked rumors about McCarthy's supposedly grim childhood (it was difficult, but hardly repressive) and alleged dishonesty as a Judge (ironically, the one time in McCarthy's career where he behaved honorably and honestly), or mouthing Drew Pearson's assertion that McCarthy flippantly grasped onto Communism after a chance conversation with some conservative backers. I don't make these comments to defend McCarthy, as odious a figure as American politics has produced, merely to assert that caricaturing the man affords us little understanding of him personally or why he was so successful. For that matter, Rovere offers little view of the Red Scare as a broader phenomenon; more than any other work, I suspect this one is responsible for the idea that the witch hunts were primarily McCarthy's responsibility and essentially vanished when he did. The book has marginal value today as an historical document, but it's still engaging and highly readable as an acid diatribe - an insight, more than anything, into liberal responses to McCarthy and how they shaped our later understanding of this era.