This compelling story of the political journey of three generations of three ethnic Catholic families is a spellbinding account of the rise and fall of liberalism during the 20th century. The first generation of immigrantsan Irish domestic, an Italian plumber, and a Polish numbers-running ward heelerowed their lives and their votes to the New Deal during the 1930s. The commitment of the next generation to liberal politics weakened as the families began to enjoy prosperity. By the 1980s and 1990s, the third generation embraced conservatism because of the corruption of the big-city machine politics, the social eruptions of the 1960s, the conundrum of affirmative action, and spreading crime. The inheritors of the mixed blessings of a large activist government became vanguards of a conservative Republican party. Freedman (Small Victories, LJ 5/1/90, one of LJ's Best Books of 1990) offers an unforgettable portrayal of the impact of politics on ordinary people. This blockbuster-to-be is social history at its best. Highly recommended for all public libraries.Karl Helicher, Upper Merion Township Lib., King of Prussia, Pa.
An intimate look at three generations of three white, ethnic Catholic families, and their eventual transformation from Democrats to Republicans, from a highly regarded former New York Times reporter.
Working backwards from three Republican party activistsTim Carey, Leslie Maeby, and Frank TrottaFreedman (Upon this Rock, 1992; Small Victories, 1990) deconstructs their family trees to explain their third-generation mutation away from Depression-era, New Deal Democratic roots. He offers richly detailed portraits of dirt-poor, working-class immigrant patriarchs and matriarchs, their children and grandchildren, and many of the people among whom they live and lived. Freedman presents these families as paradigms of America's shift to the right; he writes that this "historic realignment depended extensively, even disproportionately, on families like those of Tim Carey, Leslie Maeby, and Frank TrottaCatholics with Democratic pasts." Freedman offers no simple explanations for this realignment. Some family members shifted allegiance from Democratic machines to Republican ones in their move from the city to the suburbs; others resented the welfare system and minority demands, comparing them unfavorably to their own by-the-bootstraps experiences. And someincluding the three contemporary subjectsturned to conservatism as idealists, in opposition to the perceived failures of liberalism, especially as it affects their class and kind. Freedman deserves credit for not attempting simplistic explanations for this rightward realignment. At the same time, however, he lets the wealth of information he accumulated in his research get away from him, telling us more than we need to know about the inner workings of Montgomery Ward (in connection with the Maeby family) or the tactics employed by Maeby and Carey in recent election campaigns.
A book of great value as a manual to Democratic and Republican operatives, and of great interest, as autobiograpy, to the Republican descendants of ethnic New Deal Democrats. A hundred pages shorter, it would appeal to an even broader audience.