Clay Risen, a reporter and editor at The New York Times, is the author of The Crowded Hour, a New York Times Notable Book of 2019 and a finalist for the Gilder-Lehrman Prize in Military History. He is a member of the Society of American Historians and a fellow at the Perry World House at the University of Pennsylvania. He is also the author of two other acclaimed books on American history, A Nation on Fire and The Bill of the Century, as well as his most recent book on McCarthyism, Red Scare. He lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife and two young children.
""Lays out the many mechanisms of repression that made the Red Scare possible...[Red Scare]describes how something that once seemed so terrifying and interminable did, in fact, come to an end."" --The New Yorker ""Risen's fluent narrative...goes beyond the familiar Hollywood blacklists to reveal how conspiracy stories touched educators and people in various civil rights movements and led to the 'canceling' of individuals in business, government, and any sphere influential to the prevailing culture."" --Foreign Affairs ""In his meticulous and mesmerizing history Red Scare: Blacklists, McCarthyism, and the Making of Modern America, Clay Risen traces the cultural, political, and social forces that gave rise to McCarthy in 1950 and to his fall in 1954 ... By deftly toggling between the personal and national, Risen gives us a riveting and disquieting portrayal of our nation's recent past and, perhaps, its immediate future."" --Forward ""A sweeping history of the campaign to suppress liberal dissent via blacklisting and harassment...An exemplary work of political and cultural history that invites a gimlet-eyed look at our own time."" --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) ""Risen's feverish prose perfectly captures the chaos of McCarthyism, from the book bans to the power grabs to the lives forever altered in the scuffle...In examining this turbulent era from the vantage of our own charged moment, Risen goes beyond the spectacle to arrive at the gritty center. Frightening yet thoroughly affecting, Red Scare is propulsive history at its most striking."" --Booklist (starred review) ""The central drama of the Red Scare played, writes Clay Risen, like 'a tragedy, a thriller, a Christian morality play, even a dark comedy.' In his hands those months also read like a fast-paced detective story, of the most chilling variety. A riveting, resonant account of how cultural and political anxieties combined to power a sort of ritual cleansing, as a group of hardened conservatives lost their heads and a country lost its way."" --Stacy Schiff, author of The Witches and The Revolutionary ""I thought I had read basically everything written on McCarthyism and the scars it left on America, but Clay Risen's deep, gorgeous new history is as revelatory to me as it is moving. This is political history, yes, but also a lyrical and sensitive tolling of what this monstrous type of politics does to the human beings in its way. Today especially, we need much more careful and important public history like Red Scare--bravo."" --Rachel Maddow, author of Prequel ""What a marvelous book! The story of America's postwar Red Scare has lost none of its historical importance or contemporary resonance, and Risen brings it beautifully to life in this deeply researched, incisive, and elegantly written work. The implications for today are all too clear."" --Fredrik Logevall, author of JFK: Coming of Age in the American Century, 1917-1956 ""In a narrative both eloquent and incisive, Clay Risen has produced the most complete history of the Red Scare that has ever been written. His judgments about the characters--both famous and obscure--who mattered in this low, dishonest era are always persuasive. While a delight to read, the book explains why the conspiratorial style of politics that dominated America 75 years ago is with us still."" --Michael Kazin, author of What It Takes to Win: A History of the Democratic Party ""[A] sweeping portrait of a nightmare moment when America lost its faith in itself is a vivid reminder of what happens when we trade our founding ideals for easy answers and false security. It's a troubling parable for our own perilous times."" --Todd S. Purdum, author of An Idea Whose Time Has Come: Two Presidents, Two Parties, and the Battle for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ""Clay Risen has written a gripping genealogy of the McCarthyist right and the Red Scare...American history [that] continue[s] to echo down to the present."" -- Molly Jong-Fast, Vanity Fair, special correspondent "" ""Risen has written a fast paced morality tale for our troubled times. Narrative non-fiction at its page turning best, Red Scare is a flashing red light warning us of just how precarious our democracy is--and how we might safeguard it."" --Kati Marton, author of The Chancellor: The Remarkable Odyssey of Angela Merkel and True Believer: Stalin's Last American Spy