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American Cassandra: The Life of Dorothy Thompson
 
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American Cassandra: The Life of Dorothy Thompson (Hardcover)

~ (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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  Hardcover, April 30, 1990 -- $12.00 $0.01
  Paperback, August 31, 1991 -- $10.00 $0.34

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

A personal and public biography of American journalist Dorothy Thompson. She was the first American woman to head a foreign news bureau, the first correspondent personally expelled from Nazi Germany by Hitler, a powerful voice in the anti-Fascist movement and adviser to Roosevelt and Churchill.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 500 pages
  • Publisher: Little Brown & Co (T); 1st edition (May 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0316507237
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316507233
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.6 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,865,161 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Peter Kurth
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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific bio of a terrific and terrible woman, August 16, 1999
By Elizabeth Celeste (Alexandria, VA) - See all my reviews
I picked this book up by mistake several years ago. I thought it was a bio of Dorothy Parker. It was possibly the best mistake I ever made. Thompson is now a forgotten figure, somehow escaping the accolades heaped upon her peers.

Yet she was a fantastic and inovative woman, breaking new career paths and new ideas. Sure, she wasn't the most likeable of people. But with Thompson that's not the point.

This book has sent me on a five year quest to gather all of the information I can about her, from her book "I Saw Hitler" to collections of her essays. I've been on a tangential search for every thing relating to her I can get my hands on.

And it's all because Kurth wrote a spectacular and engaging biography.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pioneering Woman Journalist, March 12, 2006
By Robert A. Williams "libertarian" (Oberlin, OH United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
If you ask the average American to name a female reporter, most will be hard-pressed to name anyone besides Dear Abby or Ann Landers. These two "Agony Aunts" were sisters and today their daughters and others write their columns. Few Americans can name a woman journalist.

The history of discrimination against women journalists goes back to colonial America. Then came Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman who wrote under the pen name of Nellie Bly. She showed that a woman journalist could do serious muckraking. Her example inspired Dorothy Thompson who was born July 9,1893 in Lancaster, New York.

Peter Kurth has written an excellent biography of this pioneering woman journalist, tracing her life from her childhood in western New York, her journalism career, and marriages and divorces. After divorcing her first husband Josef Bard, she married author Sinclair Lewis in 1928. She divorced Lewis in 1942.

In 1920, she traveled to Europe and wrote free-lance pieces for several U.S. newspapers including the Christian Science Monitor. In 1924, the Philadelphia Public Ledger appointed her their Berlin bureau chief, which made Thompson the first woman to head a major overseas news bureau.

She is notable as the first American journalist to be expelled from Nazi Germany (in 1934), and began a crusade against dictatorship and other forms of fascism. Concerning our current U.S. president, she predicted:

"No people ever recognize their dictator in advance. He never stands for election on the platform of dictatorship ... When our dictator turns up you can depend on it that he will be one of the boys, and he will stand for everything traditionally American. And nobody will ever say 'Heil' to him, nor will they call him 'Führer' or 'Duce'. But they will greet him with one great big, universal, democratic, sheeplike bleat of 'O.K., Chief! Fix it like you wanna, Chief! Oh Kaaaay!' "
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars She was always right, January 1, 2007
By Mary E. Sibley (Carneys Point, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Dorothy Thompson's second husband was Sinclair Lewis. In their lifetimes she was as famous as he was. Their marriage was not a success. They had a son, Michael. Her curiosity and energy lifted DT to the top of the heap of journalists of the pre-WW II and post-WW II era. She was a foreign correspondent and a columnist. She liked the company of men because men did interesting things. She died in Portugal visiting her grandchildren. For many years she had a farmhouse in Vermont and arranged for friends to settle in the area. Rebecca West was an epistolary confidant.

After Thompson wrote I SAW HITLER she was expelled from Berlin. There is an enormous archive of her work at Syracuse University, her alma mater. Her father, a Methodist minister, possessed generosity of spirit. Just out of college, Thompson worked for a women's suffrage organization in New York State. At age twenty-seven she went to Europe. It was 1920. She could send the American newspapers travel articles or stories about the peace in the days following WW I. In London she and her friend Barbara DePorte went to the International News Service offering to cover an upcoming conference on Zionism.

In Paris Dorothy became friends with Rose Wilder Lane. Paul Scott Mowrer of the Chicago Daily News advised her to leave Paris where there were numerous American writers to corner the market in another European city. Dorothy Thompson chose Vienna. She was guileless and frank interviewing leaders. In Hungary she met M. Fodor, the Guardian's special correspondent. She met Czech leaders Benes and Masaryk. In 1921 Dorothy Thompson became a salaried correspondent in Vienna for the Public Ledger. Politics was failing as a remedy in Austria and the surrounding countries. In 1922 Austria received a huge recovery loan. In 1923 she married Joseph Bard, a Hungarian. In 1926 Thompson met Vincent Sheean. At the salon of Eugenia Schwarzwald Dorothy got to know Arnold Schoenberg, Adolf Loos, Bertholt Brecht, Oskar Kokoschka and others. In 1925 she was transferred to Berlin. Between 1924 and 1929 the mark was stabilized. In 1927 Joseph and Dorothy were divorced.

It was known in literary society that Sinclair Lewis was an alcoholic. Dorothy was doubtful about undertaking to marry Lewis. Prior to the marriage she was in Moscow at the same time as Scott Nearing, Anna Louise Strong, and Theodore Dreiser. After being in Europe for seven years, she was suffering from a failure of nerve. Twin Farms had three hundred acres and two farmhouses. In 1928 the whole state of Vermont had the population of Jersey City. The life of the couple was not glittering. In 1930, pregnant, Dorothy Thompson knew her marriage would not be a marriage. Following a summer in Vermont, the couple rented a house in Westport from FPA.

1930 was the year of the Nobel Prize. Dorothy found that the Germany of 1931 had been transformed. She produced pieces for the Saturday Evening Post on the new Germany. She was horrified to see nationalist regression. After three years Lewis gave up on his labor novel and wrote ANN VICKERS. Dorothy and every observer underestimated the Nazis. They were banal. In 1936 Dorothy became a political columnist for the New York Herald Tribune and later for the New York Post.

The movie WOMAN OF THE YEAR was plainly modeled on Dorothy Thompson. Maxim Kopf was her third husband. He was Czech, born in Vienna, raised in Prague. The wedding took place at the Universalist Church in Barnard, Vermont. After the war Rebecca West and Dorothy Thompson regarded themselves as a United Front in the Age of Lunacy. By 1948 DT thought there were too many lawyers and not enough statesmen running the country.
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