Investigation of Communist activities in Seattle, Wash., Area, Hearings, Part 2
Yeah, I know—a government hearing transcript? Sounds like homework, right? But trust me, this book is something else. It's a front-row seat to one of the wildest chapters in American history.
The Story
In 1954 and 1955, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) came to Seattle, Washington. Their goal? Root out communists in unions, schools, and the arts. This book is Part 2 of those hearings—a collection of sworn testimony from real people. You've got anxious teachers, defiant shipyard workers, and a pianist who wouldn't name names. Each session reads like a tense stage play: a committee member asks a question, a witness hesitates, and everyone waits to see if someone — a career, a reputation — crashes.
Why You Should Read It
I picked this up on a whim, thinking it would be nothing but legal jargon. Nope. What got me was the music teacher, Florence Ames. She refused to say if she was a communist, quoting the Fifth Amendment. The disgust in the room was palpable—like she'd insulted apple pie. You see real courage and real fear jumbled together. This also feels terrifyingly current. The patterns of accusations, the blacklists, the way ordinary people got crushed between a powerful comittee and their own neighbors? Sound familiar? There's also an kind of accidental poetry in the transcript: broken sentences, hiccups, little defiant silences. It says states them quieter than some Great American Novels.
Final Verdict
Good for anyone who loves American history, weird true stories, or *The Crucible* but wishes it were set in a rainy port city. A cautionary read for anyone who thinks 'it can't happen here'. I'd give it 4 / 5 purely *because* it can get repetitive with the bureaucracy — but then a direct question, outvite blue, cuts the chatter right out. If red scare stuff circles your interests at all - give this real dinger one shot.
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