
The gripping courtroom drama of a Brooklyn-born Englishman who became the voice of Nazi Germany, by "one of the most brilliant and erudite journalists of the century" (The New York Times).
In 1945, The New Yorker commissioned star reporter Rebecca West to cover the London trial of William Joyce, who stood accused by the British government of aiding the Third Reich. Captured by British forces in Germany, Joyce was alleged to have hosted a radio program, Germany Calling, devoted to Nazi propaganda and calls for a British surrender.
The legal case against Joyce (known as "Lord Haw-Haw" for his supposedly posh accent) proved to be tenuous and full of uncertainties. Yet each new piece of evidence added to West's timeless portrait of a social reject who turned to the far right, who rose through the ranks without ever being liked, and who sought validation through a set of shared hatreds--of elites, of communists, and especially of Jews.
As a work of psychological suspense, Rebecca West's Radio Treason anticipates Truman Capote, Janet Malcolm, and Joan Didion at their best. As a study in political extremism, as Katie Roiphe writes in her foreword, "It is as if Lord Haw-Haw has been transported from her time into ours."
Rebecca West (1892-1983) was born Cicily Isabel Fairfield in County Kerry, Ireland, and raised in Edinburgh. A member of the socialist Fabian Society and a militant suffragist, in 1914 she bore a child out of wedlock with H.G. Wells, whom she met after panning his books. A fearsome critic, she also wrote novels, reportage, history, and political analysis. As a skeptic of the Russian Revolution who became a passionate anti-communist, West alienated many on both Left and Right; she was known all her life for her scathing wit and force of will. In 1911 she wrote: "people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat, or a prostitute."
Katie Roiphe is the director of the Cultural Reporting and Criticism program at New York University. She is the author, most recently, of The Power Notebooks and The Violet Hour. She is currently a columnist at The Wall Street Journal and has contributed to The New York Times, The Atlantic, Harper's, Esquire, The Washington Post, The Guardian, the Financial Times, and The Paris Review.
"The vigor of her thought, the shape of her sentences, her knowledge of psychology, her sense of terror and of exile, her humor, the profundity of her ethical judgments, her vignettes of people and her panoramas of places . . . West's style . . . builds on the creative inventions of Shakespeare and Dickens and Dostoevsky and Henry James and D.H. Lawrence . . . West shows the indefatigability of a crack reporter in collecting details . . . She shifts from the impartiality of a judge or a psychiatrist to the compassion of a mother over early loss and sorrow, and back to the great frame of judgment of a tragic dramatist . . . It is a good story also, more exciting than any detective shocker."
--Donald A. Stauffer, The New York Times
--William Shawn
--Allan Massie, The Wall Street Journal
--Joseph Barnes, New York Herald Tribune
--Kirkus Reviews
--Struthers Burt, Saturday Review
--Time and Tide