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Harry Gold : A Novel
 
 
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Harry Gold : A Novel [Hardcover]

Millicent Dillon (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 3, 2000
An innovative bio-fiction based on the life of Soviet spy Harry Gold that brilliantly breaks new ground between fiction and biography

This is a story about a spy. And a spy, by definition, lies. So how to write the life of a spy? Eschewing the confines of traditional biography and inverting the glamour of espionage, acclaimed biographer Millicent Dillon blends fact and fiction to chronicle the human drama of Harry Gold, the American chemist who became a Soviet spy.

Dillon has researched Gold's outer life throughly, as a biographer would. She them limns his inner life to create a profound and compelling character study of a self-described "little man" who personifies the larger symbolism of this complex era in American history.

In casting Gold's story as a novel, Dillon creates a gripping narrative from the true events of political life in America from the 30s through the McCarthy era, from Gold's recruitment to his training in tradecraft to his role in Julius Rosenberg's and Klaus Fuchs's atomic espionage at Los Alamos. The result is a novel with the psychological depth of Graham Greene's The Third Man, the taut pacing of All The President's Men, and the moral poignancy of Philip Roth's I Married a Communist.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

American chemist Harry Gold spied for the Soviets during the '30s and '40s; the FBI nabbed him in 1950, by which time Gold had already helped famous "atom spy" Klaus Fuchs steal secrets about the A-bomb. Biographer (You Are Not I: A Portrait of Paul Bowles) and novelist (The Dance of the Mothers) Dillon fuses the two genres here, producing an unstable amalgam of reportage and fiction. Her sympathetic, attentive narrator follows Gold from New York circa 1935, to New Mexico and Fuchs, to Gold's arrest and trial in Philadelphia. Sometimes Dillon chooses a fairly wooden style, one meant to give an assurance that she is "telling the true story of a life." She can stop to pick up bushels of facts, skip emotionally important moments, or try far too hard to explain: "Yes, Harry nodded, though he felt terrible at the thought of not seeing Dave, for whose sake he had agreed to become involved [with the Party] in the first place." But elsewhere, Dillon's prose enters into Gold's consciousness to create pockets of great beauty, brilliant portrayals of the inner life of a damaged, lonely man. She has a novelist's feel for the telling detail--e.g., the scampering of a leashed dog as Harry returns from one of his spy missions. Like Lee Harvey Oswald in Don DeLillo's Libra--an obvious model for Dillon's volume--Gold himself finally seems a classic schlemiel: unglamorous, nervous and manipulable, extending his favors haplessly to a series of spymasters, and motivated more by anxiety, friendship and vague morality than by worked-out ideology or self-interest. If Dillon's bio-fictional hybrid fails to achieve the strange unity of DeLillo's, it nonetheless provides a compassionate, informative view of a sad, unusual life. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

From respected biographer and novelist Dillon comes this novel-cum-biography of the meek American chemist who stumbled into a sideline as a spy for the Soviet Union. Gold's clandestine career began in the 1930s, when spying for the Communists was considered the most despicable kind of treason; it ended when the FBI came to search his home: Gold surrendered and wound up with a 30-year prison sentence. Like William F. Buckley's recent Redhunter , Dillon's tale is based on fact, features real people and real events, but is written like a novel, with re-created dialogue and some imaginary scenes. This format allows Dillon to create a more three-dimensional, more fully realized Harry Gold than a traditional, just-the-facts biography might have permitted. The story itself is fascinating--Just how does a man become a spy, anyway?--and Dillon's effective melding of fiction and nonfiction makes it all the more so. Good reading for both espionage-fiction and true-crime fans. David Pitt

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Overlook Hardcover; 1st edition (April 3, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 158567012X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585670123
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,851,652 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very moving study of a surprisingly ordinary spy, June 29, 2000
This review is from: Harry Gold : A Novel (Hardcover)
In the early 1950s, an episode as divisive as any that followed in the turbulent 60s and 70s took place. The younger generation is largely unaware of it, and it's not taught in schools, probably out of some fear that, unlike the freeing of the slaves or the American Revolution, there's no way to cover it without acknowledging its ambiguous morality.

About five years after the atomic bombing of Japan that closed out World War II, the full force of America's collective dread of Communism finally found a local place to land. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were charged with delivering the secret of the bomb's design to the Soviet Union. They were tried in federal court and executed in 1953 amid worldwide furor that ranged from New York to the Vatican to the mobbed streets of Pairs.

What history there is of this shattering event consists largely of a severely limited body of demonstrable fact, an ocean of debate and speculation, and the public record of the trial itself. A great deal has been written about why the Rosenbergs did what they did but, surprisingly, there is virtually nothing known about what drove one man, Harry Gold, to not only act as a courier between U.S. spies and their Soviet controllers, but to become the government's chief witness against those very same spies.

By all accounts, Gold was a meek, enormously generous man whose only truly notable characteristic seemed to be his desire to please others. He was not politically savvy, he evinced no strong convictions, and why he would agree to become immersed in something as nefarious as handing a superweapon over to the Russians was a mystery.

In Harry Gold, noted biographer Millicent Dillon makes a bold, speculative stab at ferreting out what might have driven this very ordinary man to his extraordinary deeds. Exploiting the fictional license of the novel, Dillon is able to strip away the traditional biographer's obligation to separate documented fact from interpolated conjecture and instead present us with a cohesive, eminently plausible psychological portrait of a man who, to net it out somewhat unfairly, was so anxious not to give offense that he let himself be influenced by anyone with a stronger personality than his own, which was essentially everybody.

Harry Gold gets off to a somewhat slow start that might not immediately grab readers who don't already come to this book curious about the subject, but soon picks up emotional steam as events implode in on Gold until he can no longer stop them, assuming he'd even want to. Although her research was meticulous, Dillon deliberately avoids overburdening us with too many details that have been well-documented elsewhere, and instead concentrates on Gold himself. By the time he voluntarily confesses all to the FBI, the author doesn't need to hit us over the head explaining why: she's done such a good job of bringing us inside this man's head, it would almost be a shock if he didn't eventually break down and spill everything.

Aside from the occasional sentence that spins its metaphor for a few more words than necessary, Harry Gold is written with a sure hand and is a terrifically revealing, highly readable examination of a little-known but critical figure in our history.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Breaks the Spy Stereotype, July 7, 2002
By 
Martha E. Crites (Seattle, Wa United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Harry Gold : A Novel (Hardcover)
The characters of fiction are usually larger than life, but Millicent Dillons fictionalization of Harry Golds life as a courier for the Russians before and during the cold war revels in this ordinary mans ability to disappear, perhaps even as the main character in his own life. This makes a difficult subject for a novel, but Dillon's take on him is very readable. That a man with no large ideological beliefs would put himself at risk in this way is curious indeed. By Dillons estimation, his secret life may be all that gave this mans life color.

Harry Gold transferred information about the Manhattan Project, had contact with the Rosenbergs and later testified against them. The book gained interest for me when Dillon began to alternate chapters from British/German scientist Claud Fuchs point of view. Fuchs was revolted by Gold--and Gold idealized Fuchs. Though references are not required in fiction, the dust cover says that Dillon did her research. She didnt list any sources--I would have been very interested in seeing them.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrifically revealing and highly readable, June 27, 2000
This review is from: Harry Gold : A Novel (Hardcover)
In the early 1950s, an episode as divisive as any that followed in the turbulent 60s and 70s took place. The younger generation is largely unaware of it, and it's not taught in schools, probably out of some fear that, unlike the freeing of the slaves or the American Revolution, there's no way to cover it without acknowledging its ambiguous morality.

About five years after the atomic bombing of Japan that closed out World War II, the full force of America's collective dread of Communism finally found a local place to land. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were charged with delivering the secret of the bomb's design to the Soviet Union. They were tried in federal court and executed in 1953 amid worldwide furor that ranged from New York to the Vatican to the mobbed streets of Pairs.

What history there is of this shattering event consists largely of a severely limited body of demonstrable fact, an ocean of debate and speculation, and the public record of the trial itself. A great deal has been written about why the Rosenbergs did what they did but, surprisingly, there is virtually nothing known about what drove one man, Harry Gold, to not only act as a courier between U.S. spies and their Soviet controllers, but to become the government's chief witness against those very same spies.

By all accounts, Gold was a meek, enormously generous man whose only truly notable characteristic seemed to be his desire to please others. He was not politically savvy, he evinced no strong convictions, and why he would agree to become immersed in something as nefarious as handing a superweapon over to the Russians was a mystery.

In Harry Gold, noted biographer Millicent Dillon makes a bold, speculative stab at ferreting out what might have driven this very ordinary man to his extraordinary deeds. Exploiting the fictional license of the novel, Dillon is able to strip away the traditional biographer's obligation to separate documented fact from interpolated conjecture and instead present us with a cohesive, eminently plausible psychological portrait of a man who, to net it out somewhat unfairly, was so anxious not to give offense that he let himself be influenced by anyone with a stronger personality than his own, which was essentially everybody.

Harry Gold gets off to a somewhat slow start that might not immediately grab readers who don't already come to this book curious about the subject, but soon picks up emotional steam as events implode in on Gold until he can no longer stop them, assuming he'd even want to. Although her research was meticulous, Dillon deliberately avoids overburdening us with too many details that have been well-documented elsewhere, and instead concentrates on Gold himself. By the time he voluntarily confesses all to the FBI, the author doesn't need to hit us over the head explaining why: she's done such a good job of bringing us inside this man's head, it would almost be a shock if he didn't eventually break down and spill everything.

Aside from the occasional sentence that spins its metaphor for a few more words than necessary, Harry Gold is written with a sure hand and is a terrifically revealing, highly readable examination of a little-known but critical figure in our history.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
WHENEVER I THINK of Harry-which I do less and less often these days-I see him on a subway train from Queens to Manhattan, approaching the mid-point under the East River. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Paul Smith, New York, Harry Gold, Soviet Union, Los Alamos, Dave White, Penn Station, Jersey City, United States, East River, Franklin Chemical, Klaus Fuchs, Heart Station, Samuel Gold, Castillo Street Bridge, Cecilia Omanski, Helen Bennett, Norman Sly, Phillip Street, Sid Roth, Xavier University, Communist Party, Federal Building, Rex Harrison, Tom Cranak
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