This is FRESH AIR.
I'm Dave Davies.
In 1949,
a Republican activist named Suzanne Stevenson formed an organization called the Minute Women of the USA to fight what she perceived as the creep of Soviet communism in America.
The group would attract tens of thousands of members,
and they were told to meet in small cells and appear as individual concerned citizens when they wrote letters or heckled liberal speakers or packed a city council meeting to oppose public housing.
The story of the Minute Women is one of many told in a new book by our guest journalist and historian Clay Risen.
Risen examines the frenzy of anti communist activity that swept the nation after the Second World War,
most often associated with the Hollywood blacklist and the relentless and mostly unfounded charges of communist infiltration leveled by Wisconsin Senator Joe McCarthy.
Risen describes the red baiting hysteria of the period in colorful detail.
And and he writes
that there's a through line to be found from that era to our current political moment.
Clay Risen is currently a reporter and editor at the New York Times,
now assigned to the obituary's desk.
And he's the author of eight books, some about American history and some about whiskey.
Before writing obituaries,
Risen was a senior editor on the Times 2020 politics coverage and before that an editor on the opinion desk.
His new book is red blacklists McCarthyism and the making of Modern Americ.
Clay Risen, welcome to FRESH air.
Thanks for having me.