Reviews for The darkest year : the American home front 1941-1942

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Social history of the American homefront in the early months of World War II, a time of profound uncertainty and anxiety.As Klingaman (The First Century: Emperors, Gods and Everyman, 2008, etc.) observes at the beginning of his vigorous narrative, the Christmas season of 1941 opened with considerable promise. The Great Depression had lifted, expanded defense spending had created a thriving job market, and "fur coats seemed to be everywhere." There were warning signs, including a silk shortage caused by uneasiness over events in Asia, and war had been raging in Europe for more than two years, but Americans tended to ignore those events and to advocate staying out of the war. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor changed all that, provoking a military response and domestic measures that would themselves become infamous, such as the internment of Japanese-Americans. The author is good at teasing out small but telling detailse.g., the fact that college enrollments, not high to begin with ("the number of adults without even one year of formal education nearly equaled the number of college graduates") dropped dramatically because of the draft and the ever expanding armaments industry, which demanded workers. He also delivers entertaining anecdotes along the way, such as a unit of Confederate veterans, all over 90 years old, declaring war on Japan even as inmates of San Quentin requested knitting lessons so that they could make sweaters and hats for soldiers. Yet Klingaman's narrative is marked by dark moments and the birth of trends, some of which persist today, such as the militarization of society and a rightward turn in politics, evidenced by such things as popular support for drafting any defense worker who went on strike for better pay or working conditionsto say nothing of racist incidents against African-Americans who had moved north and west to seek such jobs.A welcome study of an aspect of wartime history that is little known among those too young to have experienced it. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Library Journal
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Following the December 7, 1941, Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, the United States was turned upside down. Historian Klingaman (The Year Without Summer) deftly navigates the ensuing roller-coaster of unease and complacency that characterized home front sentiments during the first year of U.S. involvement in World War II. Addressing xenophobia and the sparks of race riots to rationing systems and women entering the workforce, Klingaman weaves news stories, diary entries, and other contemporary sources to paint a picture of the American psyche at a time when war suddenly became very real, yet still somehow distant for those not living on the seaboards. Concluding with the one-year anniversary of Pearl Harbor, the work shows that despite promising victories for America’s fighting forces, those at home had little interest in conforming to wartime protocol and presenting a united front. VERDICT This thoroughly researched and accessible text will prove elucidating to anyone curious about social history, World War II, or the rhetoric of a country in crisis.—Elan Ward, Arizona Western Coll., Yuma © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
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This expansive survey from historian Klingaman (The First Century: Emperors, Gods, and Everyman) paints an extraordinary portrait of America's home front during the first year of WWII as it was buffeted by political, social, and economic upheaval. No part of America was untouched by the war, from big cities-H.L. Mencken raged about "filthy poor whites from Appalachia" coming to work in Baltimore's factories-to small towns like Dana, Ind., where a munitions factory signaled to war reporter Ernie Pyle "the end of the close-knit, simple, honest community" he'd known. Racial tensions escalated: there was widespread distrust of the war among blacks, and every day between March and May 1942 an average of 3,750 Japanese-Americans were escorted under guard to "assembly centers." Across the nation, there were shortages of sugar, tin, tires, nurses, and coffee. College enrollment dropped, as did manpower in factories, where women came to account for 20% of the workforce. That year, New York Times editor Hanson Baldwin wrote, Americans came to the grim realization that "no nation is unbeatable, that liberty is purchased only at the price of pain, that even the resources of the United States are limited." Klingaman uses media, literature, journals, and letters to illustrate the year, and the resulting history is riveting. Agent: Dan Bial, Dan Bial Literary Agency. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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