
"Johnson writes with grace and sense of drama. In addition to the revealing details he provides, he adeptly recreates the atmosphere in which the Senate conducted the hearings and enacted the reforms."--The Historian
"Forty years after the Church Committee lifted the veil on the covert operations of the FBI and CIA, the national security issues that the investigation raised remain all too relevant. As both a committee insider and a scholar, Loch Johnson provides a lively, reliable, and insightful account of how that investigation operated, what it uncovered, and what reforms it prompted."--Donald A. Ritchie, author of The United States Congress: A Very Short Introduction
"Loch Johnson is the nation's leading political scientist, when it comes to the study of US intelligence agencies and issues. A Season of Inquiry Revisited is great reading for anyone with an interest in congressional and intelligence history, not to mention present-day controversies about intelligence."--David Barrett, author of The CIA and Congress: The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy
"A Season of Inquiry Revisited is the vivid--and often dramatic--inside account of a crucial security investigation and, for four decades, the only work of its kind. . . . an important, readable book that demands attention."--John Prados, author of The Family Jewels: The CIA, Secrecy, and Presidential Power
Praise for the original edition:
"An engaging book that provides important insights into the real world of Capitol Hill. Reveals just how uneven the odds are--as they are now--when senators and their staffs go up against the intelligence agencies."--New York Times Book Review
"I have read Johnson's study with interest and admiration, for it strikes me as at once fair and, intellectually, quite exciting."--Robin W. Winks, author of Cloak and Gown: Scholars in the Secret War, 1939-1961