Fellow Travelers - Hunting Homosexuality and Communism
71The McCarthy Era - Fear and Phobia
FELLOW TRAVELERS
By Thomas Mallon.
Pantheon Books (Hardback) and Vintage Books (paperback)
Rating: ***** out of 5
Politics and Witch-Hunts and Fruit -- Oh my!
So many things were encompassed by the politics of the Cold War and McCarthyism. It recently came to my attention that BANANAS are a favorite American fruit because the Joseph McCarthy witch-hunters came up with a political ad declaring it un-American to dislike bananas: "The Kremlin Hates Bananas!" It was an ad plot perpetrated by DC big-wig Allen Dulles, former Board of Directors member of the United Fruit Company (UFC) in Guatemala, which made the country famous as the original "Banana Republic" for its untenably poor working/living conditions and rejection of unionized labor. The Kremlin ad and UFC created an exorbitantly high demand for bananas in the US, making the fruit actually popular in America for the first time. People were afraid not to eat bananas in the 1950s - It would be Un-American!
Thus, in the mid-20th century, the McCarthy investigators were after at least three unmentionables: 1) Communists and Communist Sympathizers [fellow travelers, pinks/pinko's or "Commie Pinko's" as Archie Bunker railed about them in the 1970s ], 2) homosexuals and lesbians [lavenders], and 3 ) banana haters.
Woe to those few Americans that were allergic to bananas!
Thomas Mallon writes a riveting novel that is truly hard to put down. Fellow travelers is haunting and some of the characters are so real I expect to see them at work tomorrow.
I re-read several sections, thinking - this is historical fiction, but might it not have been all true? It could have been so.
The pain of the relationship between the two male leads in the story is so haunting because it cannot be fixed. One of them simply and selfishly will not take a stand. The other approaches all of his interests with zeal - Catholicism, God, beating the Communists, helping refugees, cherishing his friends, and worshiping his one true love. The relationship is a raw wound that will not heal and cannot be forgotten. It is intractable. That's why I read the book twice through at once.
The storyline of the book examines the Communist sympathizers and the gay-friendly types of individuals that uphold the rights of these groups without joining them. These people dabble in Communistic activities and attend their rallies and such, or experiment with homosexual acquaintances in no-strings-attached liaisons but never commit. They don't "join up." They won't take a stand. They try to have it both ways. They lie under oath in front of the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the State Department. They name any names they can think of (to turn in as Communists) to the panel in order to get its members off their back and onto someone else's. They give up friends and lovers and never look back - Well, some take a quick glance on their way forward. Some even expect their friends and lovers to take them back.
Others simply change their stripes and charge ahead over everybody.
Joe McCarthy had the likes of Hedda Hopper to help him hunt down Hollywood actors that could be converted from Socialist or Democrat to Republican with a single threat. She had to warn them only once that she would expose them in her highly-read Hollywood gossip column and they would never work in show business - or anywhere else in America - again. They'd be called in front of the McCarthy panel before the national TV audience and derailed seven ways from sundown by Joe McCarthy and legal counsel Roy Cohn and others. Irretrievably burned at the figurative stake as Commie witches. Arthur Miller portrays this extraordinarily well in his play The Crucible (summary & analysis).
I am going to read "Fellow Travelers" several additional times and I hope it will be filmed for the big screen.
Books From Thomas Mallon
|
Yours Ever: People and Their Letters
Price: $16.01
List Price: $26.95 |
|
|
A Book of One's Own: People and Their Diaries
Price: $300.00
List Price: $15.00 |
|
|
Dewey Defeats Truman: A Novel
Price: $1.98
List Price: $14.00 |
|
|
Fellow Travelers (Vintage)
Price: $7.98
List Price: $14.95 |
|
|
Henry and Clara: A Novel
Price: $15.99
List Price: $15.00 |
|
Bandbox : A Novel
Price: $5.97
List Price: $24.95 |
|
Aurora 7
Price: $2.10
List Price: $16.00 |
|
|
Stolen Words - The Classic Book on Plagiarism
Price: $1.66
List Price: $23.95 |
An Unstable Stance
Fellow Travelers begins In 1991 Estonia at the American Embassy in Tallinn, near the the dissolution of the USSR.
Embassy Deputy Chief Hawkins Fuller is preparing from some state affair in the Embassy. At age 66, he is at the close of his federal career. He is the Number Two man at the Embassy. He was always Number Two or somewhat lower on the totem pole hierarchy of each government department that employed him. This is because he was unambitious and lacked backbone as well. In his early very 30s, when he found the family fortune frittered away by his parents' generation, he married a tall blonde model type that was related to wealth and government officials. She was mostly a meal ticket, but he tried to portray a cordial family life to the outside world in order to protect his access to her income and to protect their daughter from the truth,
After graduating from Harvard, Fuller lived not on his State Department pay, but on added allowances from his parents and uncle. This was likely larger than his paycheck from the US government. He put in his time at work, was charming to staff, constituents, and clientele, accomplished some business, but cut his hours short most days at the reception of secreted phone calls from secret boys. Only his clerical friend, Mary Johnson, knew that he was off to the local gay bars of the period in 1950s Washington DC. He spent his money on fine clothing, dining, and young and older men - lots of the younger ones.
At the Embassy that night in 1991, Fuller receives an unexpected letter from a colleague, Mary Jonhson. She writes that an old mutual acquaintance from 35 years ago is dead.
Fuller had met a nice young boy that had graduated colelge and served an internship at a DC newspaper for the summer. Taking a liking to him and wanting to keep him around, Fuller arranged a job for him with the Republican group on the Hill that was connected to the McCarthy hearings.
He seduced Tim Laughlin into the youth's first homosexual encounter and the boy fell madly in love. Hawkins nearly closed the gap to falling in love with Tim as well, but could not commit. Tim was likely to cause a commotion on the HIll and they'd both be fired for homosexuality. Fuller explained several tiems that he would have other men, but he wanted Tim as well. Tim agreed, heartborken by degrees. Hawkings nicknames him Skippy after Bishop Fulton J. Sheen's unseen angel helper that cleaned his chalkboard for his telecasts. INterestingly, both Tim and Fuller's mother watched the Bishop regularly.
Tim's family in New York revered Joseph McCarthy, but Tim, working with the investigation committee in Senator Parker's office was constantly in danger of exposure. He was still undecided about hsi status as a homosexuality, but he knew solidly that he was in love with Fuller, who sought only a steady string of young men and money.
At one point, a jealous female office worker turns Fuller in to the McCarthy people and Hawkins testifies before one of the examiners. He is told to walk across the office floor to determine whether or not he exhibits a "homosexual walk" and to read aloud from Somerset Maugham's "Of Human Bondage" to see if he "sounds homosexual."
These ridiculous tests and a lie detector all fail, even though Hawkins had been with a man a few hours earlier. Fuller goes on to a very visible and long government career. He obtains his wealthy wife/meal ticket and secures a string of boyus that diminishes in number but continues to breaks Tim's heart.
Tim joined the army, just as men in films joined the Foreign Legion, "to forget", but Fuller re-entered Skippy's life repeatedly, hurting him more deeply each time.
Tim must break away, because Fuller turned him into the federal government as a homosexual in order to get rid of him (he'd be too much of a responsibility).
Tim breaks down completely, bit eventually goes to a monastery/sanitarium in Rhode Island, leaves, becomes celibate in self defense, and works in book shops where he is happy. It is he who has died in 1991, but enjoys the last word in the - "conversation", as Hillary Clinton describes relationships - after his own death. Fromt eh grave, he sends a FAX to Fuller with the help of Mary Johnson very late on that night in 1991.
Fellow Travelers contains a lot of entertainment as well as a riveting story. Author Thomas Mallon links McCarthyism, the fear of Communism, and the phobias against homosexuality all together as a single Witch-Hunt. The hunt has lasted well past the falling of the Berlin Wall and the USSR.
Every adult American should read this book and compare it with the period in US History from 1944 through 1989, when Communism fell in the Soviet Union and the Berlin Wall came down.
Ronald Reagan, former Democrat turned Republican during the Witch-Hunts, pleaded with the USSR to bring down the Wall and with it, the Iron Curtain of Communist oppression in Europe. It all came down, but 45 years have perhaps not made much difference in the fear felt by the fellow traveler.
"We Will Not Walk In Fear"
Kenneth Leslie
Mr. Leslie worked as a farmer, teacher, preacher, political activist, journalist, media broadcaster, composer, restaurant owner, and even cab-driver.
Leslie was attacked by McCarthy and blacklisted by Life Magazine as one of a list of 50 top "dupes and fellow travelers" of communism.
Leslie was a highly gifted and appreciated poet, having won the Governor General's Award for his By Stubborn Stars in 1938. He traveled in Europe and lived in New York, and elsewhere,but his poetry described the land and the peoples of of Nova Scotia.
The "McCarthy Lists"
Cold War
|
|
A Fiery Peace in a Cold War: Bernard Schriever and the Ultimate Weapon
Price: $17.31
List Price: $32.00 |
|
|
The Cold War: A New History
Price: $9.00
List Price: $16.00 |
|
|
The Cold War: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
Price: $6.42
List Price: $11.95 |
|
The Global Cold War: Third World Interventions and the Making of Our Times
Price: $11.99
List Price: $20.99 |
|
The Real History of the Cold War: A New Look at the Past (Real History Series)
Price: $14.87
List Price: $24.95 |
|
|
The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters
Price: $14.95
List Price: $26.95 |
|
|
The Cold War: A History
Price: $5.90
List Price: $18.00 |
|
Cold War, Cool Medium: Television, McCarthyism, and American Culture (Film and Culture)
Price: $6.95
List Price: $24.00 |
Life Magazine's "Dupes and Fellow Travelers"
Life vol. 26, No. 14, pp.42-43, April 4, 1949
Arthur Miller, Author & Playwright
Kenneth Leslie, Editor of "The Protestant"
Jo Davidson, Professional Sculptor
Dorothy Parker, Famous Writer
Guy Emery Shipler, Editor
Vito Marcantonio, US Congressman
Russel Nixon, Well-known Labor lobbyist
Henry W. L. Dana, Writer
Adam Clayton Powell Jr., US Congressman
Kirtley F. Mather, Geologist
C.B. Baldwin, Wallace Party Secretary
Langston Hughes, Famous Black Poet
Paul L. Ross, Attorny
Albert Einstein, Physicist known for his theories of relativity, the Manhattan Project, and the Atom Bomb
Albert J. Fitzgerald, Labor Union president
Henry P. Fairchild, Sociology Professor
Stephen H. Fritchman, Unitarian Clergy
William B. Spofford, Episcopal Clergy
Edward L. Parsons, Episcopal bishop
Ralph Barton Perry, Philosophy Professor
J. Raymond Walsh, Radio Commentator
Mark Van Doren, Poet
Maud Slye, Pathologist
Clifford Odets, Playwright
Aaron Copland, World Renowned Composer
Leonard Bernstein, Famous Composer and Conductor; instituted Young Peoples' Concerts to teach America's children about music.
Corliss Lamont, Writer, philanthropist
Arthur Upham Pope, Authority on Persian Art
Susan B. Anthony II, Grandniece of the Famous Suffragist whose image is on the modern Susan B. Anthony Dollar Coin.
Norman Mailer, Novelist
James Waterman Wise, Author and son of Rabbi Wise
Charles (Charlie) Chaplin, Internationally Famous Movie Actor and Producer
Philip Morrison, Atomic Physicist
Olin Downes, Music Critic
O. John Rogge, Attorney
Lyman R. Bradley, German Professor
Thomas Mann, Novelist
Vida D. Scudder, English Professor
Dean Dixon, Orchestra Conductor
Frederick L. Schuman, Political Science Professor
Harlow Chapley, Astronomer
William Rose Benet, Poet
Walter Rautenstrauch, Engineering Professor
F. O. Matthiessen, History Professor
Donald Ogden Stewart, Writer
Louis Untermeyer, Poet
Georges Seldes, Editor
Lillian Hellman, Playwright
William Howard Melish, Episcopal Clergy
Gene Weltfish, Anthropologist
After the 1949 blacklisting in Life Magazine, many of these talented individuals found it difficult to make a living. Some people that were blacklisted here and elsewhere never worked again.
Fellow Travelers in the News
- Despite U.S. guidelines, flight attendants aren't handing ill passengers face masksLos Angeles Times13 hours ago
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that crews should ask a person with a cough to wear a mask and move them at least 6 feet from others. But many airlines say they have no firm rules. The fellow passenger with the hacking cough -- making no effort to cover his mouth -- is among an air traveler's biggest gripes, right up there with the screaming baby and the toddler who won't ...
- Nature healsThe Columbus Dispatch3 days ago
Neither deep intuition nor profound insight is required to deduce that most people feel better about themselves and their fellow travelers after a long walk in the woods. Certainly better, at least, than they're likely to feel after even a short drive on the freeway.
- Four Sides to Every StoryNew York Times24 hours ago
Though climate talks seem to be a two-sided debate between alarmists and skeptics, there are actually four different views, adding in denialists and calamatists.
- Ghana : Fear Grips Accra Residents As Ritual Killers Seem UnstoppableAllAfrica.com2 days ago
Accra — The number of ritual killings in the Accra metropolis is worrying and should not be taken lightly. An explanation from the police that there has not been any arrests yet because of the uncooperative attitude of the public, makes matters even more frightening.
- Fighting for right to yak on jetsThe Cincinnati Enquirer2 days ago
A coalition of electronics manufacturers, phone service providers and consumer groups is trying to rally airline passengers this week to stop Congress from banning air-to-ground phone service.
PrintShare it! — Rate it: up down flag this hub
Thoughts and Experiences
Hi Zsuzsy! I hope you enjoy this book in the fall. If it is ever made into a film, there are many scenes in which the entire audience may be crying. Several female characters suffer pain and sorrow as well, but come out on top. So, there is some happiness. There are also some spots that made me laugh. I have never read anything quite like this one.
that's a funny alternative to the original comet cleanser. thanks for sharing!





Zsuzsy Bee says:
2 years ago
Patty! This looks like a 'must read' book I'll put it on my list. Mind you with the summer coming it will have to wait till the fall. I never seem to be able to read many serious books as I spend too much time outside.
Great hub again as always regards Zsuzsy