Vous voulez voir cette page en français ? Cliquez ici.

 

or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
 
More Buying Choices
80 used & new from CDN$ 0.01

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
The Plot Against America
 
 

The Plot Against America (Paperback)

by Philip Roth (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 21.00
Price: CDN$ 15.33 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
You Save: CDN$ 5.67 (27%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca. Gift-wrap available.

16 new from CDN$ 8.71 64 used from CDN$ 0.01

Frequently Bought Together

The Plot Against America + The Human Stain: A Novel + American Pastoral: A Novel
Total List Price: CDN$ 59.90
Price For All Three: CDN$ 43.72

Show availability and shipping details

  • This item: The Plot Against America by Philip Roth

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details

  • The Human Stain: A Novel by Philip Roth

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details

  • American Pastoral: A Novel by Philip Roth

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details


Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

The Human Stain: A Novel

The Human Stain: A Novel

by Philip Roth
3.7 out of 5 stars (143)  CDN$ 14.56
American Pastoral: A Novel

American Pastoral: A Novel

by Philip Roth
3.7 out of 5 stars (114)  CDN$ 13.83
Counterlife, the

Counterlife, the

by Philip Roth
4.5 out of 5 stars (13)  CDN$ 13.71
I Married a Communist

I Married a Communist

by Philip Roth
3.4 out of 5 stars (37)  CDN$ 15.33
Indignation

Indignation

by Philip Roth
CDN$ 13.14
Explore similar items

Product Details


Product Description

Books in Canada

The centre of the Earth, following World War Two, took up residence in a rent-controlled Manhattan apartment and has not deigned to budge since. Further, the American novel has become “the elaborate conscience of the American race,” touts English critic Peter Ackroyd. So when Pulitzer Prize winner Philip Roth feeds a terror-infested populace a book titled The Plot Against America in the months leading up to a presidential election, more than an eyebrow is raised.
The Plot is a dystopian fantasy. It’s 1940 and America must decide between re-electing Roosevelt for a third term or foisting the upstart transatlantic flyer Charles Lindbergh on the world. The American people (much to the reader’s surprise) choose unwisely. Anyone familiar with actual American history would know that Lindbergh never ran for president. He did, however, champion American Isolationism, arguing that special interest groups comprised of “other peoples” (namely, four and a half million resident Jews) were bullying America into a European war. The Plot is something like an extrapolation, a ‘what if’, based on what is known of Lindbergh’s political beliefs.
The Plot opens as a sort of memoir, centering on the travails of the Roth family-yes, this book is another experiment in what uber-critic Michiko Kakutani disparagingly termed “Roth’s old mirror games.” Seven-year-old Philip is the novel’s cherubic narrator. He starts off innocent enough, taking pride in folding his cousin’s underwear, but is quickly dragged into hellish depths à la The Handmaid’s Tale.
The instigator for all that is evil? Lindbergh the President. The heroic, voracious anti-Semite immediately sets about making life for American Jews only marginally better than what they suffer in Hitler’s Germany. And the gravitas with which everything plays out is freakishly sincere for a novel (“fear presides over these memories,” shudders Roth, “a perpetual fear”). His sincerity is particularly alarming if we dare compare Roth’s fantasy election to current events.
And what a guy that new president is! In the same esteemed rank of American Hero as Henry Ford and Joe McCarthy, Lindbergh is actually awarded a Nazi medal-The Service Cross of the German Eagle-presented by none other than Air Marshal Hermann Göring. Lindbergh’s pacifist speeches, suggests Roth, are received by Americans “weary of confronting a new crisis every decade” who are “starving for normalcy, and what Charles A. Lindbergh represented was normalcy raised to heroic proportions.”
But in his 1940s Newark duplex, little Philip struggles on with more near-sighted paranoias. Will the annoying boy Seldon from downstairs ever stop following him? And will one-legged Alvin (the angry yet sexy war vet) really have to stay in Philip’s room? As The Plot chugs along, Philip’s freedom is circumscribed initially by his own family and later by his Homeland, America.
In Roth’s murky novella The Dying Animal, he suggested that the pain we experience in being “free”, is most likely self-generated. This is “the stupidity of being oneself.” But on the flip-side of his favourite themes-personal liberty, emancipation-is the far less glamourous reality of an obscenely aggressive environment, an overarching political agenda we are powerless to challenge. In being not free, the pain we experience cannot be self-generated.
Under Lindbergh’s rule, every American boy goes off for two years of military training. Lindbergh, unable to stop those who so famously kidnapped his own baby, appears intent on kidnapping the rest of America’s children himself. But Philip, still too young for conscription, focuses his dread on imaginary “bad guys” in the basement. “I know you’re down there-I’ve got a gun,” he informs the phantasms. Then sheepishly adds, “‘I’m sorry for whatever I did that was wrong.’”
Philip’s ghosts are, of course, indexes for a wider horror that plays in counterpoint with his private life. Elsewhere, Jews are rounded up and gassed; in America, Philip invents a game of following Christians home, to see where they live. “Will some Christian take me in and adopt me? Or will I wind up being kidnapped like the Lindbergh child? I pretended either that I was lost in some far-off region unknown to me or that, with Lindbergh’s connivance, Hitler had invaded America and [I was] fleeing the Nazis.”
The family-buffeted so by outside pressures-turns aggressively in on itself. “What is the matter with you?” heckles Philip’s mother. “You’re turning into-.” But the trouble remains unarticulated, as Mrs. Roth wrestles with the joint between global politics and family life. “So are you!” returns her son. Throughout the novel, there is a terror that grips, yet is ambiguous.
In the context of home and the family, this ambiguous, domestic, terror looks an awful lot like kitchen-sink drama at times. In fact, Roth writes more about the kitchen than any other room. It’s in the kitchen that a terrified Seldon (the annoying brat from downstairs) telephones Philip’s mother when his own mom goes “missing”-a victim of anti-semitic insurgents.
“I want you to eat breakfast,” counsels Mrs. Roth. “I want you to use a spoon and a fork and a napkin and a knife. Eat slowly. Use dishes.” And so, the matriarch of the novel (one of the more generous female portraits Roth has yet produced) demands the saving grace of domesticity, of the home.
As luck would have it, that is the evildoers’ plan too. A Lindbergh initiative called Homestead 42 moves Jewish families to “non-ghetto” areas of America where they might become “more American”, less Other. The educators of American ways are, predictably, middle-state farmers. What’s more, the Office of American Absorption (what deliciously Orwellian names Roth concocts!) does one better by transplanting isolated young Jewish boys-in the Roths’ case this means Sandy, Philip’s elder brother-onto tobacco farms in Kentucky. There, Sandy eats pig for the first time, likes it quite a bit, and is thus damned for the novel’s remainder.
Downstairs, in a rather heavy metaphor for the Jewish loss of voice, Alvin’s father succumbs incrementally to throat cancer. “His father coughed so frequently and with so much force that there seemed to be not one father but four, five, six fathers in there coughing themselves to death.”
Meanwhile, Lindbergh busies himself by constantly buzzing the rooftops of America in his plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, taking on a surveillance position worthy of Foucault’s “Panopticon”. As Big Brother watches from on high, the Roths alternately cower and rage beneath.
Young Philip, for one, is haunted by mutations and corruptions at every corner. He dreams of swastikas defacing his precious stamp collection (Roosevelt, too, was a great philatelist); a legless “stump of a man” begs his father for change; and then there’s cousin Alvin, minus one limb, home from Europe and shacking up in Philip’s room. “The amputation was still a limitless loss,” writes Roth. The notion of the “ghost limb” is useful to the story: it resonates pain “though no limb is left to cause it.”
Like all dystopian novels, The Plot draws its thrust from a complementary notion of a missed or lost Utopia. The funny thing about Utopia is that, while we think of it as “best” or “perfect place”, it means something far less promising for the haggard Roth family. Utopia is Greek for “no place”.
And “no home” may be the real horror The Plot rages against. Certainly, its pre-teen narrator is ruled by a fear of his family’s breakdown. What the novel misses, in all that bouncing between macro and micro world-views, is a complicated soul. Good guys and bad guys are far too easy to pick out in all this. (The evil rabbi Bengelsdorf might as well flicker the light switch and cackle when he enters the room.) In a political novel that calls into question the nature of history and autobiography, Roth’s prose is comfortable, rather than revelatory-and this stylistic complacency disappoints.
Michael Harris (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Publishers Weekly

During his long career, Roth has shown himself a master at creating fictional doppelgängers. In this stunning novel, he creates a mesmerizing alternate world as well, in which Charles A. Lindbergh defeats FDR in the 1940 presidential election, and Philip, his parents and his brother weather the storm in Newark, N.J. Incorporating Lindbergh's actual radio address in which he accused the British and the Jews of trying to force America into a foreign war, Roth builds an eerily logical narrative that shows how isolationists in and out of government, emboldened by Lindbergh's blatant anti-Semitism (he invites von Ribbentrop to the White House, etc.), enact new laws and create an atmosphere of religious hatred that culminates in nationwide pogroms.Historical figures such as Walter Winchell, Fiorello La Guardia and Henry Ford inhabit this chillingly plausible fiction, which is as suspenseful as the best thrillers and illustrates how easily people can be persuaded by self-interest to abandon morality. The novel is, in addition, a moving family drama, in which Philip's fiercely ethical father, Herman, finds himself unable to protect his loved ones, and a family schism develops between those who understand the eventual outcome of Lindbergh's policies and those who are co-opted into abetting their own potential destruction. Many episodes are touching and hilarious: young Philip experiences the usual fears and misapprehensions of a pre-adolescent; locks himself into a neighbor's bathroom; gets into dangerous mischief with a friend; watches his cousin masturbating with no comprehension of the act. In the balance of personal, domestic and national events, the novel is one of Roth's most deft creations, and if the lollapalooza of an ending is bizarre with its revisionist theory about the motives behind Lindbergh's anti-Semitism, it's the subtext about what can happen when government limits religious liberties in the name of the national interest that gives the novel moral authority. Roth's writing has never been so direct and accessible while retaining its stylistic precision and acute insights into human foibles and follies.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt
Search inside this book:

Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product)
 
(1)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

What do customers ultimately buy after viewing this item?

The Plot Against America
85% buy the item featured on this page:
The Plot Against America 4.2 out of 5 stars (23)
CDN$ 15.33
American Pastoral: A Novel
11% buy
American Pastoral: A Novel 3.7 out of 5 stars (114)
CDN$ 13.83
Farthing
2% buy
Farthing
CDN$ 8.99
Exit Ghost
1% buy
Exit Ghost
CDN$ 13.14

 

Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (11)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most helpful customer reviews

 
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars We Live In A Nightmare, Aug 12 2008
By Craobh Rua "Craobh Rua" (N. Ireland) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Charles Lindbergh is best known as the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic. However, he was also a noted isolationist and, prior to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbour, opposed any American involvement in the Second World War. Following the conviction of a German immigrant, Bruno Hauptmann, for the murder of Charles Jr, the Lindbergh family spend some time abroad, and become regular visitors to Germany in the late 1930s. Lindbergh refers to Hitler as "undoubtedly a great man", and receives the Service Cross of the German Eagle in 1938 from Hermann Goring. He continues to defend Nazi Germany after the invasions of Czechoslovakia and Poland and - in a speech in Des Moines, in September 1941 - identifies "the Jewish race" as one of the most influential groups in pushing America towards war. These groups are looking to enter the war, Lindbergh claims, "for reasons which are not American".

In real life, of course, Lindbergh's views made no real difference. America declared war on Japan, Germany and Italy after the attack on Pearl Harbour and, having once been a revered hero, Lindbergh fell rapidly from grace. He and his wife were widely viewed with distrust and even hostility - Charles was unwelcome in the Air Corps and work, for a time, work proved difficult to come by. However, things work out differently in "The Plot Against America" - which is probably best described as an alternate history book. In it, Roth imagines what his life might have been like if Lindbergh had stood for - and won - the American Presidency. However, rather than following the people in power, it imagines how Lindbergh's policies might have affected the Roth family.

The book covers a period of roughly two and a half years and opens in June 1940 - at a time when Roth was seven years old and a passionate stamp-collector. At this point, Roth was living in New Jersey with his parents and his brother Sandy - twelve years old, and a gifted artist. Up until Lindbergh's nomination for the Presidency, the Roth family led a largely happy life. They lived in a Jewish neighbourhood, something Roth's mother, Elizabeth, particularly appreciated. (Elizabeth had been raised in an Irish Catholic area, and - although she had never mentioned any blatant mistreatment - had grown up feeling something of an outsider). Although a Jewish quarter, it seems to have been typically `American' in appearance. Admittedly, the butcher was kosher - however, the language most commonly used was English rather than Hebrew or Yiddish, no-one wore a skullcap and few sported a beard. Philip, meanwhile, pledged his allegiance to America every morning at school, and couldn't see why Palestine was of any relevance. Life naturally changes dramatically under Lindbergh : an isolationist who had warned against "the infiltration of inferior blood", before negotiating an `understanding' with the Fuhrer. Not surprisingly, his subsequent policies are not designed with the best interests of the Jewish community in mind.

The man in charge of some of these policies is, essentially, a collaborator : Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf, of B'Nai Moshe Temple. A well educated and rich man, he had been viewed by the media as the religious leader of the Jewish people in New Jersey. However, he endorses Lindbergh's candidacy early in the book, effectively guarantees his victory and is subsequently `rewarded' with a post in government. As the Director of the "Office of American Absorption", he's responsible for the running of "Just Folks" - a program that takes Jewish teenagers, and sends them to live with Christian families for months at a time. In time, Sandy is selected and sent to a family in Kentucky, who run a tobacco farm - a stint that has a worrying effect on him. The Rabbi casts a long shadow over the Roth household as Elizabeth's sister, Aunt Evelyn, has a very close working relationship with the Rabbi. There are some friends and neighbours who look towards a life in Canada - others join the Canadian army to fight in the war. Among these is Roth's cousin, Alvin - who leaves early in the book - though soon returns home injured.

This is an excellent book - rather frightening, depressing and even a little challenging, but excellent nonetheless. Lindberg's government view their policies as the right and proper approach - they claim what they're doing will increase the American public's security and guarantee their well-being. People like Alvin - who fought in the war - are, on the other hand, somehow viewed unpatriotic. Early in the book the family take a trip to Washington, where his Roth's father highlights a line from the Gettysburg Address : "All Men Are Created Equal". In an instant, I was reminded of "Animal Farm" by George Orwell : "but some are more equal than others". Very highly recommended.
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
4.0 out of 5 stars A Moving Metaphor for the European Jewish Experience, Dec 6 2008

The Plot Against America is a fictional device that provides American readers with a mental exercise to help understand what it was like to be a Jew during the rise of the Nazis in Europe. It's one of the most powerful novels that I have read in many years.

The story develops brilliantly in the context of one family, Philip Roth's, and their connections to a few friends and neighbors. The Roths are a surrogate for the entire Jewish community. As such, the characters and surroundings have a strong non-fiction resonance that provides an edge over most novels.

To make way for the metaphor, Mr. Roth has to move history around in improbable ways . . . by eliminating FDR as president in 1940 and replacing FDR with a remote and Nazi-cooperating Charles Lindbergh. Those aspects of the novel are so contrived that it's hard to take them seriously . . . except that you will feel the chill of threat into your very bone marrow from this story.

If you are thinking about reading the story to think about "what if", I think you are making a mistake. The "what if" isn't all that intriguing.

If you want to read the story as a horror tale, that's the right reason for this book.

A reader can learn a lot from this novel. Place yourself in the shoes of each of the major characters and ask yourself what you would have done. If you are honest, you'll recognize how easily we are alternatively swayed and cowed by events and people around us. It's an important lesson that Mr. Roth provides very well.

As usual for a Philip Roth book, the sentences and descriptions are powerful and effective. He also keeps you off balance with his plotting. Although some "what nexts" are pretty easy to anticipate, others aren't . . . and that makes you more and more interested in what happens to these fictional Roths.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
5.0 out of 5 stars AS THE WORLD TURNS..., Nov 11 2008
By Lawyeraau (Balmoral Castle) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
I loved this book, as it was a wonderful melding of two genres, that of alternate history to that of family drama. Understandably, this book was touted as a New York Times Book Review Best Book of the Year. It is as gripping as it is moving, and the best book that I have read by this author, no doubt influenced by his own experiences growing up. The narrator, through whose eyes we see events in the book unfold, even bears the author's name.

This is a look at an America from 1940 to 1942 through the memories of young Philip Roth who lives with his working class family in a Jewish enclave in Newark, New Jersey. All is well with the world, and his childhood seems to be otherwise unremarkable until Charles A. Lindbergh, `aviator extraordinaire and suspected Nazi sympathizer, decides to run for President against a bellicose Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR). Promising to keep the nation out of war, while FDR sees war as an eventuality, Lindbergh seizes the moment. His platform is simply that one has two choices. Vote for Lindbergh or vote for war. Given that choice, Americans vote overwhelmingly for Lindbergh. Once he becomes president, Lindbergh keeps his promise and keeps America out of war, reaching a detente with Hitler that allows Hitler to continue his world wide conquest without fear of reprisal from America.

For Philip Roth, however, the election of Lindbergh irrevocably changes his world, as there are signs that Lindbergh thinks that Jews are not quite American enough, and nation wide programs are established to begin a sort of resettlement of Jews in order to help integrate them into mainstream America. The Lindbergh presidency would have a great affect on Philip and his family, with collaboration and resistance taking place all around him. What happened in America under Lindbergh would parallel in small part what was going on with the Jews of Europe. In this alternate history, Walter Winchell would rise up on behalf of the Jews as a voice that would be heard and would not be silenced. Moreover, as to why Lindbergh would take America in this direction is explained in a surprising and astonishing ending

This is an interesting and though provoking cautionary tale that will keep the reader turning the pages. Well-written with memorable, well drawn characters and a plot that is riveting, it is a bold, brash book that simply demands to be read.
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Creepily Plausible
The premise of this book is unusual, and did not appeal to me before I read the book. Roth invents an alternate history where Charles Lindbergh is elected President of the United... Read more
Published 22 months ago by Steve S.

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, but lacking in some areas also
It's taken me a long time to sit down and write this review. Opinions are divided on this book, and I wanted to think through how I really felt. Read more
Published on Jun 23 2005 by Ondre

5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic!
This is truly a wonderful surprise and the second best purchase I made this year after THE LOSERS CLUB: Complete Restored Edition. In THE PLOT AGAINST AMERICA, Mr. Read more
Published on May 28 2005 by Dillon

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed yet educated
This is the first time I had read anything by Mr. Roth. I found the book to be very slow almost trying to read. Read more
Published on April 27 2005

4.0 out of 5 stars Pretty good story by one of America's great writers
As a long-time lover of Philip Roth's books, I was a little surprised to find he'd written a book of political allegory. Read more
Published on Mar 3 2005 by S.T.Waller

4.0 out of 5 stars America and the great plot
I should have read the jacket flap before buying this, but nevertheless enjoyed it. I've read two other books by Roth previously and liked them. Read more
Published on Jan 24 2005 by Randy States

5.0 out of 5 stars America the . . .
I should have read the jacket flap before buying this, but nevertheless enjoyed it. I've read two other books by Roth previously and liked them. Read more
Published on Jan 14 2005 by Randy States

4.0 out of 5 stars Roth is at it again
Of the three books our book club recently read, we were most impressed with this latest Roth work (the other two were "Reading Lolita" and "Bark of the Dogwood). Read more
Published on Jan 4 2005 by Robert Crandle, Jr.

4.0 out of 5 stars plot thickens
Although Roth denies it, I can't help but believe that he uses this incident as a metaphor for current-day America, a nation led by those who care not one ounce for certain... Read more
Published on Dec 30 2004 by Peter Rabando

4.0 out of 5 stars Roth's latest
First the good news: the "what if" concept of a Nazi sympathizing American government led by Charles Lindbergh is wonderfully executed and eerily plausible. Read more
Published on Dec 10 2004 by Darien McIntosh

Only search this product's reviews



Listmania!


Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject


Feedback


Your Recent History

 (What's this?)

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.