Robert A. Rosenstone
Author of Romantic Revolutionary: A Biography of John Reed
About the Author
Professor Robert A. Rosenstone of the California Institute of Technology is a leading scholar in the controversial and growing field of history and film
Image credit: Ruth Miller
Works by Robert A. Rosenstone
Protest from the right 4 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1936-05-12
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of California, Los Angeles (PhD)
- Occupations
- historian
History Professor, California Institute of Technology - Organizations
- California Institute of Technology
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- Places of residence
- Los Angeles, California, USA
- Map Location
- USA
Members
Reviews
In the late 1970's my wife dragged me to see the movie "Reds". Although the movie didn't impress me, it did make me curious about John Reed. Many years before, I had heard of his best known work, "Ten Days That Shook the World", his name didn't ring a bell. But I did buy this book when it appeared in one of the many catalogs I was receiving at the time. I finally read it this year (2012).
The edition I got (Vantage Books, 1981) was supposedly a trade paperback, but the quality was down with show more the worst of mass market paperbacks. The pages were glued at the spine ("perfect" binding) and the glue disintegrated as I read the book, so by the time I finished most of the pages had fallen out. Also, it was printed on high-acid paper, which had turned brown by this time.
Rosenstone gives a comprehensive and apparently accurate account of Reed's life from his birth in Portland, Oregon (1887) to his death in Moscow, Russia (1920) of typhus.
In between, Reed made his living primarily as a journalist. Apparently from his days as a Harvard student, he was a Socialist, social activist, and labor activist. His journalistic assignments included the Mexican revolution, World War I, the labor movement (primarily in the United States), and the Russian Revolution.
Rosenstone's writing is generally clear, straightforward, and pedestrian. As I progressed through the book, I found my interest declining, until I was impatient to just get the thing finished. The production defects mentioned above probably contributed to the decline.
In sum, "Romantic Revolutionary) is worthwhile for one seriously interested in Reed's life. The reader with little or casual interest should pass. show less
The edition I got (Vantage Books, 1981) was supposedly a trade paperback, but the quality was down with show more the worst of mass market paperbacks. The pages were glued at the spine ("perfect" binding) and the glue disintegrated as I read the book, so by the time I finished most of the pages had fallen out. Also, it was printed on high-acid paper, which had turned brown by this time.
Rosenstone gives a comprehensive and apparently accurate account of Reed's life from his birth in Portland, Oregon (1887) to his death in Moscow, Russia (1920) of typhus.
In between, Reed made his living primarily as a journalist. Apparently from his days as a Harvard student, he was a Socialist, social activist, and labor activist. His journalistic assignments included the Mexican revolution, World War I, the labor movement (primarily in the United States), and the Russian Revolution.
Rosenstone's writing is generally clear, straightforward, and pedestrian. As I progressed through the book, I found my interest declining, until I was impatient to just get the thing finished. The production defects mentioned above probably contributed to the decline.
In sum, "Romantic Revolutionary) is worthwhile for one seriously interested in Reed's life. The reader with little or casual interest should pass. show less
Important material but very dense. Not an easy read but a valuable one!
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- Members
- 430
- Popularity
- #56,814
- Rating
- 3.2
- Reviews
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- ISBNs
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