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Howard Fast

Howard Melvin Fast (November 11, 1914 – March 12, 2003) was an American novelist and television writer. Fast also wrote under the pen names E.V. Cunningham and Walter Ericson.

Howard Fast
BornHoward Melvin Fast
(1914-11-11)November 11, 1914
New York City, U.S.
DiedMarch 12, 2003(2003-03-12) (aged 88)
Greenwich, Connecticut, U.S.
Pen nameE.V. Cunningham
Walter Ericson
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
Period20th century
GenreHistorical fiction
Notable worksThe Last Frontier, Spartacus, April Morning
SpouseBette Cohen (1937–1994; her death; 2 children)
Mercedes O'Connor (1999–2003; his death)

 Literature portal

Biography edit

Early life edit

Fast was born in New York City. His mother, Ida (née Miller), was a British Jewish immigrant, and his father, Barney Fast, was a Ukrainian Jewish immigrant who shortened his name from Fastovsky upon arrival in America. When his mother died in 1923 and his father became unemployed, Howard's youngest brother, Julius, went to live with relatives, while he and his older brother, Jerome, sold newspapers. Howard credited his early voracious reading to a part-time job in the New York Public Library.

Fast began writing at an early age. While hitchhiking and riding railroads around the country to find odd jobs, he wrote his first novel, Two Valleys, published in 1933 when he was 18. His first popular work was Citizen Tom Paine, a fictional account of the life of Thomas Paine. Always interested in American history, Fast also wrote The Last Frontier (about the Cheyenne Indians' attempt to return to their native land, and which inspired the 1964 movie Cheyenne Autumn)[1] and Freedom Road (about the lives of former slaves during Reconstruction).

The novel Freedom Road is based on a true story and was made into a miniseries of the same name starring Muhammad Ali, who, in a rare acting role, played Gideon Jackson, an ex-slave in 1870s South Carolina who is elected to the U.S. House and battles the Ku Klux Klan and other racist organizations to keep the land that they had tended all their lives.

Contribution to constitutionalism edit

Fast is the author of the prominent "Why the Fifth Amendment?"[2] essay. This essay explains in detail the purpose of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America. Fast effectively uses the context of the Red Scare to illustrate the purpose of the "Fifth."

Career edit

Fast spent World War II working with the United States Office of War Information, writing for Voice of America. In 1943, he joined the Communist Party USA and in 1950, he was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities; in his testimony, he refused to disclose the names of contributors to a fund for a home for orphans of American veterans of the Spanish Civil War (one of the contributors was Eleanor Roosevelt), and he was given a three-month prison sentence for contempt of Congress.[3]

While he was at Mill Point Federal Prison, Fast began writing his most famous work, Spartacus, a novel about an uprising among Roman slaves.[3] Blacklisted by major publishing houses following his release from prison, Fast was forced to publish the novel himself. It was a success, going through seven printings in the first four months of publication. (According to Fast in his memoir, 50,000 copies were printed, of which 48,000 were sold.)

He subsequently established the Blue Heron Press, which allowed him to continue publishing under his own name throughout the period of his blacklisting. Just as the production of the film version of Spartacus (released in 1960) is considered a milestone in the breaking of the Hollywood blacklist, the reissue of Fast's novel by Crown Publishers in 1958 effectively ended his own blacklisting within the American publishing industry.

In 1952, Fast ran for Congress on the American Labor Party ticket. During the 1950s he also worked for the Communist newspaper, the Daily Worker. In 1953, he was awarded the Stalin Peace Prize. Later that decade, Fast broke with the Party over issues of conditions in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, particularly after Nikita Khrushchev's report "On the Personality Cult and its Consequences" at a closed session of the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in February 1956, denouncing the personality cult and dictatorship of Joseph Stalin,[4] and the Soviet military intervention to suppress the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in November. In his autobiographical work titled The Naked God: The Writer and the Communist Party published in 1957, he wrote: There was the evil in what we dreamed of as Communists: we took the noblest dreams and hopes of mankind as our credo; the evil we did was to accept the degradation of our own souls—and because we surrendered in ourselves, in our own party existence, all the best and most precious gains and liberties of mankind—because we did this, we betrayed mankind, and the Communist party became a thing of destruction.[5]

In the mid-1950s, Fast moved with his family to Teaneck, New Jersey.[6] In 1974, Fast and his family moved to California, where he wrote television scripts, including such television programs as How the West Was Won. In 1977, he published The Immigrants, the first of a six-part series of novels.

In 1948, author Harry Barnard accused Fast of copyright infringement, charging he "borrowed liberally" from Barnard's biography of John Peter Altgeld for his own book about Altgeld, The American. Fast settled for $7,500 ($93,725 in 2022 dollars). His publisher also agreed to republish Barnard's book. [7]

Personal life and death edit

Fast married his first wife, Bette Cohen, on June 6, 1937. Their children were Jonathan and Rachel. Bette died in 1994. During the marriage, Fast had a relationship in the 1950s with Isabel (Dowden) Johnson, former wife of Lester Cole and later wife to Alger Hiss.[8][9] In 1999, he married Mercedes O'Connor, who survived him. Mercedes brought three sons to the marriage.

Fast's son Jonathan Fast, himself a novelist, was married to novelist Erica Jong; their daughter is the pundit Molly Jong-Fast. The writer Julius Fast was his younger brother.

Fast died in his home in Old Greenwich, Connecticut.[10]

Works edit

Novels edit

  • Two Valleys (1933)
  • Strange Yesterday (1934)
  • Place in the City (1937)
  • Conceived in Liberty (1939)
  • The Last Frontier (1941)
  • Haym Solomon: Son of Liberty (1941)
  • Lord Baden-Powell of the Boy Scouts (1941)
  • The Romance of a People (1941)
  • Goethals and the Panama Canal (1942)
  • The Picture-book History of the Jews (1942)
  • The Tall Hunter (1942)
  • The Unvanquished (1942)
  • Citizen Tom Paine (1943)
  • Freedom Road (1944)
  • The American: a Middle Western legend (1946)
  • Clarkton (1947)
  • The Children (1947)
  • My Glorious Brothers (1948)
  • The Proud and the Free (1950)
  • Spartacus (1951) ISBN 1-56324-599-X
  • Fallen Angel (1952). Under the pseudonym Walter Ericson
  • Tony and the Wonderful Door (1952)
  • The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti (1953)[11]
  • Silas Timberman (1954)[12]
  • The Story of Lola Gregg (1956)
  • Moses, Prince of Egypt (1958)
  • The Winston Affair (1959)
  • The Golden River (1960)
  • April Morning (1961)
  • Power (1962)
  • Agrippa's Daughter (1964)
  • Torquemada (1966)
  • The Crossing Series:
  1. The Crossing (1971)
  2. Bunker Hill (2001). Prequel
  1. The Immigrants (1977)
  2. Second Generation (1978)
  3. The Establishment (1979)
  4. The Legacy (1981)
  5. The Immigrant's Daughter (1985)
  6. An Independent Woman (1997)
  • Max (1982)
  • The Outsider (1984)
  • The Dinner Party (1987)
  • The Pledge (1988)
  • The Confession of Joe Cullen (1989)
  • The Trial of Abigail Goodman (1993)
  • Seven Days in June (1994)
  • The Bridge Builder's Story (1995)
  • Redemption (1999)
  • Greenwich (2000) ISBN 0-15-100620-2

Novels under the pseudonym Behn Boruch edit

  • In the Beginning: The Story of Abraham (1958)
  • The Patriarchs: The Story of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (1959)
  • The Coat of Many Colors: The Story of Joseph (1959)

Novels under the pseudonym E.V. Cunningham edit

  • Sylvia (1960)[13]
  • Phyllis (1962)[14]
  • Alice (1963)[15]
  • Shirley (1964)[16]
  • Helen (1966)
  • Harvey Krim:
  1. Lydia (1964)
  2. Cynthia (1967)
  • John Gomaday and Larry Cohen:
  1. Penelope (1965), adapted from Penelope (film)
  2. Margie (1966)
  • The Masao Masuto Mysteries:
  1. Samantha, AKA The Case of the Angry Actress (1967)
  2. The Case of the One-Penny Orange (1977)
  3. The Case of the Russian Diplomat (1978)
  4. The Case of the Poisoned Eclairs (1979)
  5. The Case of the Sliding Pool (1981)
  6. The Case of the Kidnapped Angel (1982)
  7. The Case of the Murdered Mackenzie (1984)
  • Sally (1967)
  • The Assassin Who Gave Up His Gun (1967)
  • Millie (1973)
  • The Wabash Factor (1986)

Short story collections edit

  • Patrick Henry and the Frigate's Keel, and other stories of a young nation (1945). Contains 12 short stories:
    • "Patrick Henry and the Frigate's Keel"
    • "Rachel" (1941)
    • "The Pirate and the General"
    • "Neighbor Sam" (1942)
    • "Conyngham"
    • "The Brood" (1939)
    • "The Day of Victory" (1943)
    • "Amos Todd's Vinegar" (1943)
    • "Sun in the West" (1938)
    • "The Bookman" (1936)
    • "The Price of Liberty"
    • "Not Too Hard" (1939)
  • Departure, and Other Stories (1949). Contains 19 short stories:
    • "Departure" (1947)
    • "The Old Wagon" (1945)
    • "The Shore Route"
    • "Onion Soup"
    • "An Epitaph for Sidney"
    • "Where Are Your Guns?" (1944)
    • "Spoil the Child" (1938)
    • "The Little Folk from the Hills" (1948)
    • "Who Is He?
    • "The Suckling Pig"
    • "The Rickshaw" (1947)
    • "The Gentle Virtue"
    • "Dumb Swede"
    • "The Gray Ship" (1946)
    • "Three Beautiful Things"
    • "The First Rose of Summer"
    • "Wake Up Glad"
    • "The Police Spy"
    • "Thirty Pieces of Silver" (1949)
  • The Last Supper and Other Stories (1955). Contains 16 short stories:
    • "The Last Supper"
    • "The Ancestor"
    • "The Vision of Henry J. Baxter"
    • "A Walk Home"
    • "Coca Cola"
    • "Christ in Cuernavaca", AKA "The Man Who Looked Like Jesus"
    • "The Power of Positive Thinking"
    • "Dignity"
    • "Gentleman from Mississippi"
    • "Journey to Boston" (1949)
    • "The Child and the Ship" (1950)
    • "Sunday Morning"
    • "The Upraised Pinion"
    • "The Holy Child"
    • "My Father"
    • "Coda: The Poet in Philadelphia"
  • The Howard Fast Reader; a collection of stories and novels (1960). Contains 3 novels and 21 short stories:
    • "Christ in Cuernavaca", AKA "The Man Who Looked Like Jesus" (1955). Already compiled before
    • "Rachel" (1941). Already compiled before
    • "Onion Soup" (1949). Already compiled before
    • "Three Beautiful Things" (1949). Already compiled before
    • "The First Rose of Summer" (1949). Already compiled before
    • "Where Are Your Guns?" (1944). Already compiled before
    • "The Gentle Virtue" (1949). Already compiled before
    • The Golden River (1960). Novel already published before
    • "Neighbor Sam" (1942). Already compiled before
    • "Departure" (1947). Already compiled before
    • "The Gray Ship" (1946). Already compiled before
    • "The Suckling Pig" (1949). Already compiled before
    • "Old Sam Adams (Three Tales)"
    • "Journey to Boston" (1949). Already compiled before
    • "The Ancestor" (1955). Already compiled before
    • "The Child and the Ship" (1950). Already compiled before
    • "The Vision of Henry J. Baxter" (1955). Already compiled before
    • The Children (1947). Novel already published before
    • "The Little Folk from the Hills" (1948). Already compiled before
    • "Coca Cola" (1955). Already compiled before
    • "The Cold, Cold Box" (1959)
    • "The Large Ant"
    • Freedom Road (1944). Novel already published before
    • "Spoil the Child" (1938). Already compiled before
  • The Edge of Tomorrow (1961). Contains 1 novella and 6 short stories:
    • The First Men, AKA The Trap (1960). Novella
    • "The Large Ant" (1960). Already compiled before
    • "Of Time and Cats" (1959)
    • "Cato the Martian" (1960)
    • "The Cold, Cold Box" (1959). Already compiled before
    • "The Martian Shop" (1959)
    • "The Sight of Eden" (1960)
  • The Hunter and The Trap (1967). Contains 1 novella and 1 short story:
    • "The Hunter"
    • The First Men, AKA The Trap (1960). Novella already published before
  • The General Zapped an Angel (1970). Contains 9 short stories:
    • "The General Zapped an Angel"
    • "The Mouse" (1969)
    • "The Vision of Milty Boil"
    • "The Mohawk"
    • "The Wound"
    • "Tomorrow's Wall Street Journal"
    • "The Interval"
    • "The Movie House"
    • "The Insects
  • A Touch of Infinity (1973). Contains 13 short stories:
    • "The Hoop" (1972)
    • "The Price"
    • "A Matter of Size"
    • "The Hole in the Floor"
    • "General Hardy's Profession"
    • "Show Cause"
    • "Not with a Bang"
    • "The Talent of Harvey"
    • "The Mind of God"
    • "UFO"
    • "Cephes 5"
    • "The Pragmatic Seed"
    • "The Egg"
  • Time and the Riddle: thirty-one Zen stories (1975). Contains 1 novella and 30 short stories:
    • "UFO" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Hole in the Floor" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "General Hardy's Profession" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "Echinomastus Contentii"
    • "Tomorrow's Wall Street Journal" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "A Matter of Size" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "Show Cause" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Martian Shop" (1959). Already compiled before
    • "The Pragmatic Seed" (1973). Already compiled before
    • The First Men, AKA The Trap (1960). Novella already published before
    • "The Hoop" (1972). Already compiled before
    • "The Cold, Cold Box" (1959). Already compiled before
    • "The Talent of Harvey" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Wound" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "The General Zapped an Angel" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "The Price" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Vision of Milty Boil" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "Cato the Martian" (1960). Already compiled before
    • "Not with a Bang" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Movie House" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "Cephes 5" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "Of Time and Cats" (1959). Already compiled before
    • "The Interval" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "The Egg" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Insects" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "The Sight of Eden" (1960). Already compiled before
    • "The Mind of God" (1973). Already compiled before
    • "The Mohawk" (1970). Already compiled before
    • "The Mouse" (1969). Already compiled before
    • "The Large Ant" (1960). Already compiled before
    • "The Hunter" (1967). Already compiled before
  • The Call of Fife and Drum: Three Novels of the Revolution (1987). Contains 3 novels already published before:
    • The Unvanquished (1942)
    • Conceived in Liberty (1939)
    • The Proud and the Free (1950)

Short stories edit

Uncollected short stories.

  • "Wrath of the Purple" (1932)
  • "Stockade" (1936)
  • "While They Dance" (1937)
  • "Ransom of the Rose" (1937)
  • "Beyond the War" (1937)
  • "Men Must Fight" (1938)
  • "Girl and the General" (1938)
  • "Girl With Yellow Hair" (1938)
  • "A Child Is Born" (1938)
  • "Merry Gentlemen" (1938)
  • "Schoolmaster's Empire" (1939)
  • "A Man's Wife" (1939)
  • "For Always" (1939)
  • "A President's Wife" (1939)
  • "The Last Night" (1939)
  • "Love Marches at Midnight" (1940)
  • "Because He Trusted Me" (1940)
  • "To Marry With A Stranger" (1940)
  • "New Guinea Commandos" (1942)
  • "Air Base" (1942)
  • "American Seaman" (1942)
  • "Nurse on Bataan" (1942)
  • "Story of Slim" (1942)
  • "Before Dawn" (1942)
  • "How Yuang Died for China" (1943)
  • "Front-Line Newsman" (1943)
  • "Sunk by Jap Bombs!" (1943)
  • "Rescue in Singapore" (1943)
  • "Stand by for Dive!" (1943)
  • "Something had to be told" (1943)
  • "Marine on Guadalcanal" (1943)
  • "Airbase in the Jungle" (1943)
  • "Gray Ship's Captain" (1943)
  • "Gnats Against Elephants" (1943)
  • ""Ceiling Zero" over Kiska" (1943)
  • "A Friendly Hand to Help Him..." (1943)
  • "One Ship Was Lost" (1943)
  • "Port in the Arctic" (1943)
  • "New Hope – From the Sky!" (1943)
  • "Detroit in the Desert" (1943)
  • "The 'Eggshell' Escapes" (1943)
  • "Private Scott and the Axis" (1943)
  • "The "Tommies" Got Special Delivery" (1943)
  • "One-Man Navy" (1944)
  • "Who Is Jesus Christ?" (1944)
  • "The Pirate and the General" (1945)
  • "The Gallant Ship" (1946)
  • "The Gray Ship's Crew" (1946)
  • "By Broken Pike, Iron Chain" (1946)
  • "Mr. Lincoln" (1947)
  • "Memories of Sidney" (1950)
  • "A Child is Lost" (1950)
  • "Spartacus [from a Novel by Howard Fast]" (1951)
  • "The Protest" (1954)
  • "Lola Gregg" (1956)

Poems edit

Plays edit

  • Four Bachelor Brothers (1936?, with Ray Barr)
  • Minette (1936, with Ray Barr). Unpublished
  • Farewell Dimitrios (1950). Unpublished
  • The Hammer (1950)
  • Thirty Pieces of Silver (1954)
  • General Washington and the Water Witch (1956)
  • Naked God (1958–1959). Unpublished
  • Annabelle (1960). Unpublished
  • The Crossing (1962). Unpublished
  • The Hill (1964)
  • The Adventures of Nat Love (197?). Unpublished
  • Lion's Cub (1978)
  • David and Paula (1982)
  • Citizen Tom Paine (1986)
  • Second Coming (1991)
  • The Novelist (1992)

Nonfiction edit

Articles
  • Story of an American. Vito Marcantonio (1946)
  • May Day 1947 (1947), New York, United May Day Committee
  • Three Names for Fascists (1947)
  • Crisis No. 1 (1951)
  • Crisis No. 2 (1951)
  • Crisis No. 3 (1951)
  • May Day 1951 (1951)[17]
  • Spain and peace (1951),[18] New York, Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee
  • Open Letter to Soviet Writers (1957)
Autobiographies
  • The Naked God: The Writer and the Communist Party (1957)
  • Being Red (1990), Boston, Houghton Mifflin
Biographies
  • The Incredible Tito: Man of the Hour (1944),[19] New York, Magazine House
Essays
  • Literature and Reality (1951)
  • War and Peace: Observations on Our Times (1990)
Guides
  • The Art of Zen Meditation (1977)
History

Filmography edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fast, Being Red (1990) pp. 162–63.
  2. ^ "Howard Fast: Why the Fifth Amendment?". www.trussel.com. Retrieved 2020-07-11.
  3. ^ a b Burnsworth, Jodi (March 9, 2012). . The Inter-Mountain. Elkins, West Virginia. Archived from the original on September 15, 2014. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
  4. ^ "Happy Anniversary, Nikita Khrushchev". Washington Post. 22 February 2006. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  5. ^ Howard Fast, The Naked God: The Writer and the Communist Party, Google Books.
  6. ^ Und Spartakus, Berliner Zeitung, 15 March 2003. Article in German relating the decision to move to Teaneck.
  7. ^ "Paying Up," Newsweek, January 19, 1948
  8. ^ Remnick, David (1986-10-12). "Alger Hiss Goes Ungently Into That Good Night". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-02-01.
  9. ^ Sorin, Gerald (2012-11-05). Howard Fast: Life and Literature in the Left Lane. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-00732-2.
  10. ^ Rothstein, Mervyn (2003-03-13). "Howard Fast, 88, Best-Selling Novelist, Dies". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  11. ^ Catalog.hathitrust.org
  12. ^ Catalog.hathitrust.org
  13. ^ Cuningham, E.V. (1960). Sylvia (in French) (1st ed.). New York City: Doubleday. ASIN B0006AWMWI.
  14. ^ Cuningham, E.V. (1962). Phyllis (1st ed.). New York City: Doubleday. ASIN B000GLYLX0.
  15. ^ Cuningham, E.V. (1963). Alice (1st ed.). London: André Deutsch. ASIN B0000CLXJ6.
  16. ^ Cuningham, E.V. (1964). Shirley (1st ed.). New York City: Doubleday. ASIN B000EON3GA.
  17. ^ "May Day". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 2020-07-11.
  18. ^ "Spain and peace : Fast, Howard, 1914-2003. : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2020-07-11.
  19. ^ Fast, Howard (1944). The Incredible Tito. Magazine House.
  20. ^ "Intellectuals in the fight for peace : Fast, Howard, 1914-2003 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2020-07-11.

External links edit

howard, fast, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2008, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Howard Fast news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Howard Melvin Fast November 11 1914 March 12 2003 was an American novelist and television writer Fast also wrote under the pen names E V Cunningham and Walter Ericson Howard FastBornHoward Melvin Fast 1914 11 11 November 11 1914New York City U S DiedMarch 12 2003 2003 03 12 aged 88 Greenwich Connecticut U S Pen nameE V CunninghamWalter EricsonOccupationNovelistNationalityAmericanPeriod20th centuryGenreHistorical fictionNotable worksThe Last Frontier Spartacus April MorningSpouseBette Cohen 1937 1994 her death 2 children Mercedes O Connor 1999 2003 his death Literature portal Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Contribution to constitutionalism 1 3 Career 2 Personal life and death 3 Works 3 1 Novels 3 2 Novels under the pseudonym Behn Boruch 3 3 Novels under the pseudonym E V Cunningham 3 4 Short story collections 3 5 Short stories 3 6 Poems 3 7 Plays 3 8 Nonfiction 4 Filmography 5 References 6 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Fast was born in New York City His mother Ida nee Miller was a British Jewish immigrant and his father Barney Fast was a Ukrainian Jewish immigrant who shortened his name from Fastovsky upon arrival in America When his mother died in 1923 and his father became unemployed Howard s youngest brother Julius went to live with relatives while he and his older brother Jerome sold newspapers Howard credited his early voracious reading to a part time job in the New York Public Library Fast began writing at an early age While hitchhiking and riding railroads around the country to find odd jobs he wrote his first novel Two Valleys published in 1933 when he was 18 His first popular work was Citizen Tom Paine a fictional account of the life of Thomas Paine Always interested in American history Fast also wrote The Last Frontier about the Cheyenne Indians attempt to return to their native land and which inspired the 1964 movie Cheyenne Autumn 1 and Freedom Road about the lives of former slaves during Reconstruction The novel Freedom Road is based on a true story and was made into a miniseries of the same name starring Muhammad Ali who in a rare acting role played Gideon Jackson an ex slave in 1870s South Carolina who is elected to the U S House and battles the Ku Klux Klan and other racist organizations to keep the land that they had tended all their lives Contribution to constitutionalism edit Fast is the author of the prominent Why the Fifth Amendment 2 essay This essay explains in detail the purpose of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America Fast effectively uses the context of the Red Scare to illustrate the purpose of the Fifth Career edit Fast spent World War II working with the United States Office of War Information writing for Voice of America In 1943 he joined the Communist Party USA and in 1950 he was called before the House Committee on Un American Activities in his testimony he refused to disclose the names of contributors to a fund for a home for orphans of American veterans of the Spanish Civil War one of the contributors was Eleanor Roosevelt and he was given a three month prison sentence for contempt of Congress 3 While he was at Mill Point Federal Prison Fast began writing his most famous work Spartacus a novel about an uprising among Roman slaves 3 Blacklisted by major publishing houses following his release from prison Fast was forced to publish the novel himself It was a success going through seven printings in the first four months of publication According to Fast in his memoir 50 000 copies were printed of which 48 000 were sold He subsequently established the Blue Heron Press which allowed him to continue publishing under his own name throughout the period of his blacklisting Just as the production of the film version of Spartacus released in 1960 is considered a milestone in the breaking of the Hollywood blacklist the reissue of Fast s novel by Crown Publishers in 1958 effectively ended his own blacklisting within the American publishing industry In 1952 Fast ran for Congress on the American Labor Party ticket During the 1950s he also worked for the Communist newspaper the Daily Worker In 1953 he was awarded the Stalin Peace Prize Later that decade Fast broke with the Party over issues of conditions in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe particularly after Nikita Khrushchev s report On the Personality Cult and its Consequences at a closed session of the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in February 1956 denouncing the personality cult and dictatorship of Joseph Stalin 4 and the Soviet military intervention to suppress the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in November In his autobiographical work titled The Naked God The Writer and the Communist Party published in 1957 he wrote There was the evil in what we dreamed of as Communists we took the noblest dreams and hopes of mankind as our credo the evil we did was to accept the degradation of our own souls and because we surrendered in ourselves in our own party existence all the best and most precious gains and liberties of mankind because we did this we betrayed mankind and the Communist party became a thing of destruction 5 In the mid 1950s Fast moved with his family to Teaneck New Jersey 6 In 1974 Fast and his family moved to California where he wrote television scripts including such television programs as How the West Was Won In 1977 he published The Immigrants the first of a six part series of novels In 1948 author Harry Barnard accused Fast of copyright infringement charging he borrowed liberally from Barnard s biography of John Peter Altgeld for his own book about Altgeld The American Fast settled for 7 500 93 725 in 2022 dollars His publisher also agreed to republish Barnard s book 7 Personal life and death editFast married his first wife Bette Cohen on June 6 1937 Their children were Jonathan and Rachel Bette died in 1994 During the marriage Fast had a relationship in the 1950s with Isabel Dowden Johnson former wife of Lester Cole and later wife to Alger Hiss 8 9 In 1999 he married Mercedes O Connor who survived him Mercedes brought three sons to the marriage Fast s son Jonathan Fast himself a novelist was married to novelist Erica Jong their daughter is the pundit Molly Jong Fast The writer Julius Fast was his younger brother Fast died in his home in Old Greenwich Connecticut 10 Works editNovels edit Two Valleys 1933 Strange Yesterday 1934 Place in the City 1937 Conceived in Liberty 1939 The Last Frontier 1941 Haym Solomon Son of Liberty 1941 Lord Baden Powell of the Boy Scouts 1941 The Romance of a People 1941 Goethals and the Panama Canal 1942 The Picture book History of the Jews 1942 The Tall Hunter 1942 The Unvanquished 1942 Citizen Tom Paine 1943 Freedom Road 1944 The American a Middle Western legend 1946 Clarkton 1947 The Children 1947 My Glorious Brothers 1948 The Proud and the Free 1950 Spartacus 1951 ISBN 1 56324 599 X Fallen Angel 1952 Under the pseudonym Walter Ericson Tony and the Wonderful Door 1952 The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti 1953 11 Silas Timberman 1954 12 The Story of Lola Gregg 1956 Moses Prince of Egypt 1958 The Winston Affair 1959 The Golden River 1960 April Morning 1961 Power 1962 Agrippa s Daughter 1964 Torquemada 1966 The Crossing Series The Crossing 1971 Bunker Hill 2001 Prequel The Hessian 1972 Lavette Family Series The Immigrants 1977 Second Generation 1978 The Establishment 1979 The Legacy 1981 The Immigrant s Daughter 1985 An Independent Woman 1997 Max 1982 The Outsider 1984 The Dinner Party 1987 The Pledge 1988 The Confession of Joe Cullen 1989 The Trial of Abigail Goodman 1993 Seven Days in June 1994 The Bridge Builder s Story 1995 Redemption 1999 Greenwich 2000 ISBN 0 15 100620 2 Novels under the pseudonym Behn Boruch edit In the Beginning The Story of Abraham 1958 The Patriarchs The Story of Abraham Isaac and Jacob 1959 The Coat of Many Colors The Story of Joseph 1959 Novels under the pseudonym E V Cunningham edit Sylvia 1960 13 Phyllis 1962 14 Alice 1963 15 Shirley 1964 16 Helen 1966 Harvey Krim Lydia 1964 Cynthia 1967 John Gomaday and Larry Cohen Penelope 1965 adapted from Penelope film Margie 1966 The Masao Masuto Mysteries Samantha AKA The Case of the Angry Actress 1967 The Case of the One Penny Orange 1977 The Case of the Russian Diplomat 1978 The Case of the Poisoned Eclairs 1979 The Case of the Sliding Pool 1981 The Case of the Kidnapped Angel 1982 The Case of the Murdered Mackenzie 1984 Sally 1967 The Assassin Who Gave Up His Gun 1967 Millie 1973 The Wabash Factor 1986 Short story collections edit Patrick Henry and the Frigate s Keel and other stories of a young nation 1945 Contains 12 short stories Patrick Henry and the Frigate s Keel Rachel 1941 The Pirate and the General Neighbor Sam 1942 Conyngham The Brood 1939 The Day of Victory 1943 Amos Todd s Vinegar 1943 Sun in the West 1938 The Bookman 1936 The Price of Liberty Not Too Hard 1939 Departure and Other Stories 1949 Contains 19 short stories Departure 1947 The Old Wagon 1945 The Shore Route Onion Soup An Epitaph for Sidney Where Are Your Guns 1944 Spoil the Child 1938 The Little Folk from the Hills 1948 Who Is He The Suckling Pig The Rickshaw 1947 The Gentle Virtue Dumb Swede The Gray Ship 1946 Three Beautiful Things The First Rose of Summer Wake Up Glad The Police Spy Thirty Pieces of Silver 1949 The Last Supper and Other Stories 1955 Contains 16 short stories The Last Supper The Ancestor The Vision of Henry J Baxter A Walk Home Coca Cola Christ in Cuernavaca AKA The Man Who Looked Like Jesus The Power of Positive Thinking Dignity Gentleman from Mississippi Journey to Boston 1949 The Child and the Ship 1950 Sunday Morning The Upraised Pinion The Holy Child My Father Coda The Poet in Philadelphia The Howard Fast Reader a collection of stories and novels 1960 Contains 3 novels and 21 short stories Christ in Cuernavaca AKA The Man Who Looked Like Jesus 1955 Already compiled before Rachel 1941 Already compiled before Onion Soup 1949 Already compiled before Three Beautiful Things 1949 Already compiled before The First Rose of Summer 1949 Already compiled before Where Are Your Guns 1944 Already compiled before The Gentle Virtue 1949 Already compiled before The Golden River 1960 Novel already published before Neighbor Sam 1942 Already compiled before Departure 1947 Already compiled before The Gray Ship 1946 Already compiled before The Suckling Pig 1949 Already compiled before Old Sam Adams Three Tales Journey to Boston 1949 Already compiled before The Ancestor 1955 Already compiled before The Child and the Ship 1950 Already compiled before The Vision of Henry J Baxter 1955 Already compiled before The Children 1947 Novel already published before The Little Folk from the Hills 1948 Already compiled before Coca Cola 1955 Already compiled before The Cold Cold Box 1959 The Large Ant Freedom Road 1944 Novel already published before Spoil the Child 1938 Already compiled before The Edge of Tomorrow 1961 Contains 1 novella and 6 short stories The First Men AKA The Trap 1960 Novella The Large Ant 1960 Already compiled before Of Time and Cats 1959 Cato the Martian 1960 The Cold Cold Box 1959 Already compiled before The Martian Shop 1959 The Sight of Eden 1960 The Hunter and The Trap 1967 Contains 1 novella and 1 short story The Hunter The First Men AKA The Trap 1960 Novella already published before The General Zapped an Angel 1970 Contains 9 short stories The General Zapped an Angel The Mouse 1969 The Vision of Milty Boil The Mohawk The Wound Tomorrow s Wall Street Journal The Interval The Movie House The Insects A Touch of Infinity 1973 Contains 13 short stories The Hoop 1972 The Price A Matter of Size The Hole in the Floor General Hardy s Profession Show Cause Not with a Bang The Talent of Harvey The Mind of God UFO Cephes 5 The Pragmatic Seed The Egg Time and the Riddle thirty one Zen stories 1975 Contains 1 novella and 30 short stories UFO 1973 Already compiled before The Hole in the Floor 1973 Already compiled before General Hardy s Profession 1973 Already compiled before Echinomastus Contentii Tomorrow s Wall Street Journal 1970 Already compiled before A Matter of Size 1973 Already compiled before Show Cause 1973 Already compiled before The Martian Shop 1959 Already compiled before The Pragmatic Seed 1973 Already compiled before The First Men AKA The Trap 1960 Novella already published before The Hoop 1972 Already compiled before The Cold Cold Box 1959 Already compiled before The Talent of Harvey 1973 Already compiled before The Wound 1970 Already compiled before The General Zapped an Angel 1970 Already compiled before The Price 1973 Already compiled before The Vision of Milty Boil 1970 Already compiled before Cato the Martian 1960 Already compiled before Not with a Bang 1973 Already compiled before The Movie House 1970 Already compiled before Cephes 5 1973 Already compiled before Of Time and Cats 1959 Already compiled before The Interval 1970 Already compiled before The Egg 1973 Already compiled before The Insects 1970 Already compiled before The Sight of Eden 1960 Already compiled before The Mind of God 1973 Already compiled before The Mohawk 1970 Already compiled before The Mouse 1969 Already compiled before The Large Ant 1960 Already compiled before The Hunter 1967 Already compiled before The Call of Fife and Drum Three Novels of the Revolution 1987 Contains 3 novels already published before The Unvanquished 1942 Conceived in Liberty 1939 The Proud and the Free 1950 Short stories edit Uncollected short stories Wrath of the Purple 1932 Stockade 1936 While They Dance 1937 Ransom of the Rose 1937 Beyond the War 1937 Men Must Fight 1938 Girl and the General 1938 Girl With Yellow Hair 1938 A Child Is Born 1938 Merry Gentlemen 1938 Schoolmaster s Empire 1939 A Man s Wife 1939 For Always 1939 A President s Wife 1939 The Last Night 1939 Love Marches at Midnight 1940 Because He Trusted Me 1940 To Marry With A Stranger 1940 New Guinea Commandos 1942 Air Base 1942 American Seaman 1942 Nurse on Bataan 1942 Story of Slim 1942 Before Dawn 1942 How Yuang Died for China 1943 Front Line Newsman 1943 Sunk by Jap Bombs 1943 Rescue in Singapore 1943 Stand by for Dive 1943 Something had to be told 1943 Marine on Guadalcanal 1943 Airbase in the Jungle 1943 Gray Ship s Captain 1943 Gnats Against Elephants 1943 Ceiling Zero over Kiska 1943 A Friendly Hand to Help Him 1943 One Ship Was Lost 1943 Port in the Arctic 1943 New Hope From the Sky 1943 Detroit in the Desert 1943 The Eggshell Escapes 1943 Private Scott and the Axis 1943 The Tommies Got Special Delivery 1943 One Man Navy 1944 Who Is Jesus Christ 1944 The Pirate and the General 1945 The Gallant Ship 1946 The Gray Ship s Crew 1946 By Broken Pike Iron Chain 1946 Mr Lincoln 1947 Memories of Sidney 1950 A Child is Lost 1950 Spartacus from a Novel by Howard Fast 1951 The Protest 1954 Lola Gregg 1956 Poems edit Never to Forget The Battle of the Warsaw Ghetto 1946 with William Gropper New York Book League of Jewish Peoples Fraternal Order I W O To Nazim Hikmet 1950 October Revolution 1950 Korean Lullaby 1951 1952 Poet in Philadelphia 1954 Plays edit Four Bachelor Brothers 1936 with Ray Barr Minette 1936 with Ray Barr Unpublished Farewell Dimitrios 1950 Unpublished The Hammer 1950 Thirty Pieces of Silver 1954 General Washington and the Water Witch 1956 Naked God 1958 1959 Unpublished Annabelle 1960 Unpublished The Crossing 1962 Unpublished The Hill 1964 The Adventures of Nat Love 197 Unpublished Lion s Cub 1978 David and Paula 1982 Citizen Tom Paine 1986 Second Coming 1991 The Novelist 1992 Nonfiction edit Articles Story of an American Vito Marcantonio 1946 May Day 1947 1947 New York United May Day Committee Three Names for Fascists 1947 Crisis No 1 1951 Crisis No 2 1951 Crisis No 3 1951 May Day 1951 1951 17 Spain and peace 1951 18 New York Joint Anti Fascist Refugee Committee Open Letter to Soviet Writers 1957 Autobiographies The Naked God The Writer and the Communist Party 1957 Being Red 1990 Boston Houghton Mifflin Biographies The Incredible Tito Man of the Hour 1944 19 New York Magazine House Essays Literature and Reality 1951 War and Peace Observations on Our Times 1990 Guides The Art of Zen Meditation 1977 History The Story of the Jews in the United States 1942 Tito and His People 1944 Ben Davis Walks on Freedom Road 1945 Intellectuals in the fight for peace 1949 20 New York Masses amp Mainstream Peekskill USA 1951 New York Civil Rights Congress The Jews Story of a People 1968 ISBN 0 440 34444 1Filmography editRachel and the Stranger 1948 based on the 1941 short story Rachel Spartacus 1960 based on the 1951 novel Spartacus Man in the Middle 1963 based on the 1959 novel The Winston Affair Cheyenne Autumn 1964 inspired by the 1941 novel The Last Frontier as well as Mari Sandoz s Cheyenne Autumn Mirage 1965 based on the 1952 novel Fallen Angel originally published under the pseudonym Walter Ericson Freedom Road 1979 miniseries based on the 1944 novel Freedom Road April Morning 1987 based on the 1961 novel April Morning The Crossing 2000 based on the 1971 novel The Crossing Spartacus 2004 miniseries based on the 1951 novel Spartacus References edit Fast Being Red 1990 pp 162 63 Howard Fast Why the Fifth Amendment www trussel com Retrieved 2020 07 11 a b Burnsworth Jodi March 9 2012 The Forgotten Prison on Kennison Mountain Part 3 of 4 The Inter Mountain Elkins West Virginia Archived from the original on September 15 2014 Retrieved September 15 2014 Happy Anniversary Nikita Khrushchev Washington Post 22 February 2006 Retrieved 19 August 2013 Howard Fast The Naked God The Writer and the Communist Party Google Books Und Spartakus Berliner Zeitung 15 March 2003 Article in German relating the decision to move to Teaneck Paying Up Newsweek January 19 1948 Remnick David 1986 10 12 Alger Hiss Goes Ungently Into That Good Night Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2022 02 01 Sorin Gerald 2012 11 05 Howard Fast Life and Literature in the Left Lane Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 00732 2 Rothstein Mervyn 2003 03 13 Howard Fast 88 Best Selling Novelist Dies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 02 14 Catalog hathitrust org Catalog hathitrust org Cuningham E V 1960 Sylvia in French 1st ed New York City Doubleday ASIN B0006AWMWI Cuningham E V 1962 Phyllis 1st ed New York City Doubleday ASIN B000GLYLX0 Cuningham E V 1963 Alice 1st ed London Andre Deutsch ASIN B0000CLXJ6 Cuningham E V 1964 Shirley 1st ed New York City Doubleday ASIN B000EON3GA May Day www marxists org Retrieved 2020 07 11 Spain and peace Fast Howard 1914 2003 Free Download Borrow and Streaming Internet Archive Retrieved 2020 07 11 Fast Howard 1944 The Incredible Tito Magazine House Intellectuals in the fight for peace Fast Howard 1914 2003 Free Download Borrow and Streaming Internet Archive Retrieved 2020 07 11 External links editHoward Fast at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Howard Fast Comprehensive Bibliography amp Texts Steve Trussel Trussel com Howard Fast a critical companion Howard Fast at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Howard Fast amp oldid 1200830268, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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