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Book reviews for "Myerson,_Michael" sorted by average review score:

Advocate and Activist: Memoirs of an American Communist Lawyer
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Pro Ref) (1993)
Authors: John J. Abt, Michael Myerson, and Margaret Burnham
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300 pages of nothing
John Abt lived one of the more interesting lives of the twentieth century. As a secret member of the Communist Party and espionage agent, he could tell a whale of a story. As someone who watched the rise and fall of American and Soviet Communism, he might reflect on what happened, and why a movement that once looked so succesful fell apart. If nothing else, he might at least have told some interesting lies.

He doesn't.

Instead, he spends over three hundred pages carefully avoiding the main themes of his life: what he really did as a Communist, why he felt it necessary to conceal his membership in the Party, what it was like inside the Party, and what, if anything, he learned from it all.

The advanced student of communist propoganda will learn a few things, and those who know of Abt from Elizabeth Bentley's and Whittaker Chambers memoirs, the Venona decrypts, and other sources can glean a few interesting facts here and there, but mostly, Abt says nothing about himself, his life, his movement, or his century, and takes three hundred pages to avoid saying it.

A wasted life, and a waste of money. Don't buy it.

Propaganda by an Espionage Agent
John Abt's autobiography follows the distinctive pattern set over the years by similar Communist dissimulations in print. That is, his smooth lies are very much like those of Ring Lardner, Jr., Lillian Hellman, Alger Hiss, Dorothy Healey, Vladimir Posner, Armand Hammer, Emmanuel Fried, and a devil's host of others. Abt's life 'explained' is an exercise in 1) that which he does NOT explain, 2) attempts at outright Soviet Agitprop, and 3) a profound anti-Americanism. Abt was one of a rather large number of 'secret' party members. In his case, secret for 50 years (he 'came out' at his 80th birthday party). Truly a man who lived a lie all of his adult life. Along with "fellow travelers" ("Sputniki", from the Russian of Trotsky's political term), the Communist movement set out to destroy America by "any means possible". Then to deliver it to the Lenin-Stalin-Khrushchev-Bresznev regime - the largest mass murder machine in human history. (See: "The Black Book of Communism", elsewhere on Amazon.Com). Abt mumbles on about the "Marxist study group" he belonged to in the1930's, which included Alger Hiss and several other Soviet espionage agents. After the Whittaker Chambers defection affair, Abt, not himself a 'source', became eventually its head, turning the ring over to the NKVD (in '44), later called the "Perlo Group". The group's members, were denounced by Perlo's ex-wife, who named Abt as an espionage agent. (see the "Venona" transcripts elsewhere on Amazon.Com for Abt as a spy) Abt mentions many other communists and fellow travelers (carefully, sure that they had been already identified elsewhere) in this autobiography completed after his death in '91. All these should be of interest to anyone interested in friends of Stalin, from Pete Seeger to Studs Terkel. He is very obtuse about other friends, as is his co-author Michael Myerson about himself, a guy who writes for 'various publications', ' organizes political campaigns', 'teaches in NYC', had been "a National Director of a Peace Organization" (all unamed), ie., Myerson is a cypher. But Abt's agitprop work must be read with great care. Do keep in mind that the CPUSA (and Abt) was wholly controlled by the Soviet butchers from Moscow. Abt's legal career is a sort of ultimate dark lawyer joke. Published by the U. of Illinois (what could they have been thinking?). Minus 5 stars and therefore recommended for that very reason.


Memories of Underdevelopment: The Revolutionary Films of Cuba
Published in Hardcover by Viking Press (1973)
Author: Michael Myerson
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Nothing Could Be Finer
Published in Hardcover by International Publishers (1978)
Author: Michael Myerson
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These are the good old days; coming of age as a radical in America's late, late years
Published in Unknown Binding by Grossman ()
Author: Michael Myerson
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Watergate: crime in the suites
Published in Unknown Binding by International Publishers ()
Author: Michael Myerson
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