Howard Fast
Howard Melvin Fast (November 11, 1914 – March 12, 2003) was an American novelist and screenwriter specializing in historical fiction that dramatized struggles for liberty, most notably Spartacus (1951), which depicted a slave revolt against Rome and inspired Stanley Kubrick's 1960 film adaptation.[1] Born to a poor Jewish family in Manhattan—his father a newsstand operator after earlier factory work—Fast dropped out of high school during the Great Depression, self-educated through voracious reading, and published his debut novel Two Valleys, set in the American colonial era, at age 18 in 1933.[1][2] Over a career spanning nearly 100 books, he achieved commercial success with works like Freedom Road (1941), portraying Reconstruction-era racial tensions, and April Morning (1961), a young adult novel on the American Revolution's outset, while earning Pulitzer Prize nominations for Citizen Tom Paine (1943) and April Morning.[1][2] Fast's defining controversy stemmed from his 1943 enlistment in the Communist Party USA, where he served as a leading intellectual defender of Soviet policies, including acceptance of the Moscow show trials, and received the Stalin Peace Prize in 1954 for advancing proletarian internationalism; he left the party in 1956, citing its totalitarian betrayals exposed by Khrushchev's secret speech.[3][4] His principled refusal to inform for the House Un-American Activities Committee led to a 1950 contempt conviction and three-month federal prison term, followed by Hollywood blacklisting that compelled him to publish genre fiction under the pseudonym E.V. Cunningham to support his family.[5][1] Though his early communist phase drew accusations of propagandizing history to fit Marxist narratives, Fast's post-renunciation oeuvre emphasized individual heroism against tyranny, cementing his legacy as a populist storyteller whose output, while uneven in literary estimation, sold millions and influenced popular depictions of pivotal historical upheavals.[1][6]Early Life
Childhood and Family
Howard Fast was born on November 11, 1914, in New York City to Barney Fast, a Ukrainian Jewish immigrant who arrived in the United States as a child and worked in various manual labor roles including ironworker, cable-car conductor, and garment worker, and Ida Miller Fast, a Jewish immigrant from Lithuania.[1][7] The family resided in the impoverished tenements of Manhattan's Lower East Side, where they struggled with chronic financial hardship amid the challenges faced by early 20th-century urban immigrants.[8] Fast's mother died in 1923 when he was eight years old, exacerbating the family's economic distress as his father faced unemployment and inability to provide adequately.[9][10] The household, which included Fast and his siblings, descended into destitution, leading to the children being separated and placed with relatives or in institutional care while Fast, from around age nine, took on odd jobs, including begging and petty theft for survival, fostering early self-reliance in the face of abandonment and scarcity.[9][11] These formative experiences of familial fragmentation and unrelenting urban poverty, marked by inadequate housing, hunger, and labor exploitation, imprinted on Fast a direct encounter with socioeconomic inequality, distinct from abstract ideology and rooted in the concrete realities of immigrant life in interwar New York.[10][12]Education and Early Writing
Fast attended public schools in New York City but dropped out of high school without graduating, around age 17, to take various jobs supporting his immigrant family amid financial struggles after his mother's death.[2] Largely self-taught, he developed a rigorous reading habit in public libraries, devouring works on history, classics, and literature to compensate for his abbreviated formal education.[7] His literary breakthrough came early with the publication of his debut novel, Two Valleys (1933) by Dial Press, written at age 18 and set amid frontier conflicts during the American Revolution.[13] This was followed swiftly by The Children (1935), addressing working-class hardships, and Place in the City (1937), his third novel, which depicted urban poverty and social tensions drawn directly from his Bronx upbringing and observations of Depression-era inequality.[14] These works showcased Fast's raw talent for historical and social realism, produced at a prolific pace despite his lack of institutional training. By the late 1930s, Fast's output earned critical notice, including the 1937 Bread Loaf Literary Award for his short fiction, positioning him as a promising voice in American historical novels prior to broader fame.[15] His early success stemmed from disciplined self-motivation rather than academic pedigree, with themes rooted in personal encounters with economic deprivation rather than ideological constructs.Literary Career
Initial Publications and Rise to Fame
Fast's literary career began with the publication of his debut novel, Two Valleys, in 1933 at the age of 18, marking his entry into historical fiction centered on frontier life and personal struggle.[16] Subsequent works, including Strange Yesterday (1934) and Place in the City (1937), explored themes of urban hardship and individual resilience, but it was Conceived in Liberty (1939) that signaled his shift toward more ambitious narratives of American revolutionary figures, portraying George Washington as a humanist leader amid ordinary citizens' ordeals.[13] These early efforts established Fast's style of blending meticulous historical detail with accessible storytelling, appealing to readers seeking inspirational tales of perseverance. The early 1940s saw Fast's breakthrough with a series of bestsellers that elevated his profile. The Last Frontier (1941) depicted Cheyenne resistance against U.S. military expansion, emphasizing heroism among the marginalized, while The Unvanquished (1942) continued his revolutionary saga by chronicling Washington's trials through the eyes of common soldiers.[13] Citizen Tom Paine (1943), a fictionalized biography of the revolutionary pamphleteer, captured Paine's radical zeal and intellectual battles, earning praise for its vivid portrayal of ideological ferment in early America.[1] Freedom Road (1944) followed, narrating post-Civil War Reconstruction through the lens of a freed slave's political ascent, highlighting themes of democratic aspiration and communal effort.[17] These novels evolved Fast's approach by integrating populist elements—focusing on the agency of everyday people in pivotal historical moments—without overt didacticism, which broadened their appeal to mainstream audiences. From 1942 to 1944, while affiliated with the U.S. Office of War Information in a Signal Corps unit and serving as a war correspondent, Fast maintained remarkable productivity, completing and publishing key works amid wartime duties.[18] This period solidified his reputation, as his books achieved widespread commercial success, with millions of copies circulating globally by the mid-1940s and positioning him among America's top-selling authors.[1] Critics acclaimed the authenticity and narrative drive of his historical fiction, which resonated with readers drawn to stories of collective heroism and individual grit during global conflict.[1]Major Historical Novels
Fast's major historical novels dramatized collective resistance to oppression across diverse eras, from ancient slave revolts to frontier conflicts and revolutionary origins, frequently employing fictionalized characters and dialogues to heighten emotional impact and moral urgency over verbatim historical records. These works recurrently explored motifs of class-based uprisings, where marginalized groups—slaves, indigenous tribes, or colonial farmers—confront tyrannical authority through unified defiance and exemplary individual leadership, reflecting Fast's interpretation of history as driven by inexorable struggles for human dignity.[19] The Last Frontier (1941) recounts the Northern Cheyenne's 1,500-mile exodus in 1878-1879 from forced confinement in Indian Territory (modern Oklahoma) to their traditional Wyoming-Montana homelands, amid clashes with U.S. Army units that resulted in over 100 Cheyenne deaths. Fast based the plot on documented events like the Dull Knife band's breakout from Fort Robinson, Nebraska, portraying tribal leaders' resolve and the human cost of relocation policies, though he amplified dramatic confrontations for narrative tension.[20] Self-published in 1951 after commercial outlets rejected it amid Fast's political scrutiny, Spartacus details the Third Servile War (73-71 BC), centering Thracian gladiator Spartacus's command of up to 120,000 escaped slaves against Roman legions led by Crassus and Pompey. The novel incorporates historical elements such as the rebels' victories at Mount Vesuvius and their eventual crucifixion en masse—6,000 along the Appian Way—but introduces ideological speeches framing the revolt as an embryonic challenge to exploitative hierarchies. It achieved immediate commercial success, with 48,000 of 50,000 printed copies sold within three months via direct sales efforts.[21] April Morning (1961) immerses readers in the Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, through the perspective of fictional 15-year-old Adam Cooper, whose father falls among the 49 colonial militiamen killed or wounded at Lexington Green. Fast adhered to the sequence of Paul Revere's ride, the "shot heard round the world," and minutemen pursuits to Concord Bridge—drawing from eyewitness accounts like those in A Narrative of the Transactions (1775)—but invented family dynamics and internal monologues to convey the psychological shift from colonial subjugation to insurgent resolve.[22]Use of Pseudonyms and Adaptations
Following his 1953 testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, Howard Fast faced widespread professional blacklisting by publishers and Hollywood studios, prompting him to adopt the pseudonym E.V. Cunningham for a series of thriller and mystery novels.[2] Under this alias, he authored works including Sylvia (1960), Phyllis (1962), Alice (1963), and the Masao Masuto detective series, featuring a Japanese-American investigator.[23] These publications, totaling over 20 titles, enabled Fast to generate revenue and maintain productivity despite industry ostracism, as mainstream outlets refused his submissions under his real name.[15] Fast also published Silas Timberman (1954), a novel depicting academic persecution amid anti-communist fervor, under his own name through Blue Heron Press, a venture he co-founded to circumvent publisher boycotts.[24] This self-publishing effort underscored his determination to distribute politically themed works directly, though it limited distribution compared to pseudonym-driven commercial thrillers. Fast's novel Spartacus (1951) was adapted into the 1960 film directed by Stanley Kubrick, with Dalton Trumbo credited for the screenplay drawn from Fast's book; the production's public acknowledgment of blacklisted contributors, including Trumbo, helped erode Hollywood's informal bans.[25] Other adaptations of Fast's stories included Rachel and the Stranger (1948), a Western film based on his short story, highlighting his early forays into narrative forms amenable to cinematic translation.[26] These ventures, alongside pseudonym use, sustained his career output, contributing to a bibliography exceeding 50 books across genres.[27]Political Activism
Joining the Communist Party
Howard Fast joined the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) in 1943, during the height of World War II when the United States and the Soviet Union were allied against Nazi Germany.[28] This period marked a temporary thaw in anti-communist sentiment in the U.S., as the Soviet Red Army's role in defeating fascism garnered widespread admiration among left-leaning intellectuals.[2] Fast, already an established novelist by then, had been shaped by the economic hardships of the Great Depression, which he later described as fostering his radical inclinations through direct exposure to poverty and class disparities in American society.[28] Fast's motivations stemmed from a class-based analysis of capitalism's failures, viewing the CPUSA as a vehicle for anti-fascist solidarity and systemic change. He accepted the premise—shared by many contemporaries—that communism offered a rational alternative to the crises of unemployment and inequality he witnessed firsthand during his youth in New York City's Bronx.[29] The party's alignment with Stalinist policies, including unquestioning support for the USSR's internal purges of the 1930s, was largely overlooked amid the wartime focus on collective resistance to Axis powers, which Fast embraced as a moral imperative.[2] Upon joining, Fast quickly ascended in the party's cultural apparatus, leveraging his literary prominence to contribute articles and commentary to the Daily Worker, the CPUSA's official newspaper. His involvement amplified the party's messaging on proletarian struggles and Soviet achievements, positioning him as a key figure in intellectual circles that promoted the USSR as a bulwark against both fascism and unchecked capitalism. This enthusiasm reflected Fast's initial faith in Marxist-Leninist principles as a pathway to historical progress, untainted at the time by later revelations of Soviet atrocities.[4]Advocacy and Organizational Roles
Fast held leadership positions within Communist Party-affiliated organizations, notably serving on the executive board of the Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee (JAFRC), formed in 1942 to assist refugees fleeing fascist regimes, particularly those from the Spanish Civil War. The JAFRC coordinated medical aid and relief efforts, raising funds via the Spanish Refugee Appeal to support approximately 3,000 refugees in American camps, with operations aligned to Soviet-directed anti-fascist campaigns through party channels.[30][31][32] He actively produced propaganda materials endorsing Soviet policies, including the 1944 article "Together With Our Soviet Allies," which portrayed wartime collaboration between U.S. and Red Army forces as a model of proletarian internationalism, published amid CPUSA efforts to bolster alliance narratives.[33] Fast's writings in outlets like the Daily Worker consistently advanced party positions on global antifascism, reflecting directives from Moscow to frame Soviet actions as defensive against capitalist aggression.[34] In recognition of such contributions, Fast received the Stalin Peace Prize in 1953, valued at approximately $25,000 tax-free, for purportedly strengthening peace among peoples; he formally accepted it via a speech on April 22, 1954, at New York's Hotel McAlpin, attended by over 1,000 supporters, where he lauded Stalin's legacy in fostering global harmony against imperialism.[35][36] Throughout the 1940s and early 1950s, Fast engaged in CPUSA fundraising drives and public speeches to propagate the party line, including addresses at events tied to international communist fronts like the 1949 World Peace Conference in Paris, where he advocated for Soviet-led peace initiatives and mobilized support for party objectives.[37][34]Imprisonment and Legal Battles
In 1947, Howard Fast, as chairman of the Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee (JAFRC), received a subpoena from the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) demanding records related to the organization's fundraising for Spanish Civil War refugees, many of whom were affiliated with communist causes.[19] His refusal to provide the documents or identify contributors—rooted in his allegiance to the Communist Party USA and unwillingness to aid congressional investigations into alleged subversive activities—resulted in a contempt of Congress conviction that October, carrying a three-month prison sentence and $500 fine.[19][5] After failed appeals, including a 1948 affirmation by the U.S. Court of Appeals, Fast served his term from May to July 1950 at the Mill Point Federal Prison Camp, a minimum-security facility in rural West Virginia.[38][39] There, he composed much of his historical novel Spartacus, drawing on the isolation to focus on themes of rebellion against oppression.[11] The episode intensified Fast's professional isolation, as publishers blacklisted him amid the broader Red Scare, denying contracts due to his demonstrated non-cooperation with HUAC and perceived communist ties.[40] This led him to establish Blue Heron Press and self-publish Spartacus in 1951, selling over 20,000 copies through personal networks and Communist Party channels despite distribution challenges.[12] In his 1957 memoir The Naked God, Fast recounted the prison ordeal as a pivotal ordeal of confinement and introspection, underscoring the personal costs of his political commitments without recanting his earlier stance.[29]Ideological Shifts and Controversies
Defense of Stalinism and Soviet Policies
In the 1940s and early 1950s, Howard Fast consistently defended Soviet policies under Joseph Stalin, portraying the USSR as a vanguard of human progress against capitalist imperialism. As a Communist Party USA member since 1943 and frequent contributor to the Daily Worker, Fast echoed the party's rejection of Western reports on Soviet repressions, including the Gulag labor camp system and the Great Purge, as anti-communist fabrications akin to fascist propaganda. This stance aligned with CPUSA orthodoxy, which prioritized ideological loyalty over independent verification of atrocity claims emerging from defectors and émigrés.[41][34] Fast's 1950 essay collection Literature and Reality exemplified his alignment with Stalinist cultural directives, critiquing Western authors like Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos for producing "decadent" works divorced from objective social truths. He argued that authentic literature must reflect the "dialectical" reality discerned through Marxist-Leninist lenses, thereby endorsing socialist realism as the sole valid artistic form and implicitly justifying Soviet suppression of nonconformist expression. This mirrored Andrei Zhdanov's 1946 doctrine, which mandated art's subordination to party goals and condemned bourgeois individualism as ideological sabotage. Fast's tract thus served as apologetics for the USSR's postwar cultural purges, framing them as defenses of progressive realism against reactionary decay.[42][43] Fast's pre-1956 advocacy overlooked mounting evidence of Stalin-era causal mechanisms—such as engineered famines, show trials, and mass deportations—that empirical analyses attribute to over 20 million excess deaths. Party-aligned sources Fast relied upon emphasized utopian industrial gains and antifascist victories, sidelining primary data from Soviet archives (later declassified) and survivor accounts that documented systematic state terror. This prioritization of narrative fidelity over verifiable human costs underscored a broader pattern among Western Stalinists, where doctrinal commitments eclipsed first-hand indicators of policy-induced mortality.[44][45]Resignation from the Party
In February 1956, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev delivered a "secret speech" at the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, denouncing Joseph Stalin's cult of personality and detailing mass purges, executions, and gulags that claimed millions of lives under his rule.[46] The revelations, which leaked widely by summer, shattered assumptions among international communists about the Soviet model's integrity, prompting defections and internal crises in parties worldwide, including the Communist Party USA (CPUSA).[47] Howard Fast, who had defended Soviet policies for over a decade, confronted these disclosures as a profound moral rupture. On January 31, 1957, he publicly disassociated himself from the CPUSA in a statement reported by The New York Times, attributing his break primarily to Khrushchev's exposures of Stalin's atrocities, which he described as evoking "moral revulsion" at the party's complicity in denying and enabling such horrors.[3] Fast emphasized that the speech revealed not isolated errors but systemic barbarism, including the execution of Old Bolsheviks and fabricated trials, which contradicted the egalitarian ideals he had championed.[28] He rejected any continued allegiance, stating he could no longer consider himself a communist, framing the exit as a principled stand against deception rather than expediency amid U.S. anti-communist pressures. In his 1990 memoir Being Red, Fast reflected on the resignation as a culmination of accumulated doubts, admitting his earlier "naivety" in overlooking the CPUSA's rigidity and intolerance for dissent, which had insulated members from critical inquiry into Soviet realities.[48] He described the party as a dogmatic structure that demanded uncritical loyalty, stifling independent thought and punishing skeptics, leading him toward an "independent leftism" unaligned with either Soviet orthodoxy or Western capitalism.[49] This shift marked Fast's evolution into a critic of totalitarianism from a humanistic, anti-authoritarian perspective, though he retained commitments to social justice without party affiliation. The announcement drew swift condemnation from CPUSA loyalists, who branded Fast a "renegade" and opportunist exploiting the revelations for personal gain.[50] Soviet-aligned writers, such as those in Moscow publications, accused him of Zionist sympathies and apologetics for Israel, dismissing his departure as a betrayal of proletarian internationalism.[51] Former comrades in the U.S. echoed this, portraying his moral reckoning as capitulation to bourgeois media like The New York Times, intensifying isolation from his prior networks while affirming the depth of his disillusionment.[47]Criticisms of Political Influence on Work
Critics have argued that Fast's affiliation with the Communist Party USA from 1943 to 1956 profoundly shaped his historical novels, often subordinating factual nuance to ideological imperatives of class struggle and proletarian heroism. In works like Spartacus (1951), Fast recast the Third Servile War (73–71 BCE) as a proto-communist uprising led by a messianic figure against a monolithic Roman elite, minimizing internal slave divisions, logistical realities, and the revolt's ultimate suppression in favor of an ahistorical narrative of moral binaries and inevitable worker solidarity.[52] [53] This approach, scholars contend, reflected Fast's "present-mindedness," projecting mid-20th-century Marxist dialectics onto antiquity, thereby distorting causal historical dynamics such as economic incentives, tribal loyalties, and military contingencies that Appian and Plutarch documented as pivotal.[52] Literary critic Alan Wald characterized Fast's integration of politics into fiction as marked by "shallow eclecticism and lack of clarity," suggesting that his ideological commitments led to eclectic but undigested historical syntheses that prioritized agitprop over rigorous analysis.[54] During the Hollywood blacklist era, Fast's refusal to cooperate with the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1953 resulted in publisher rejections, prompting him to self-publish Spartacus through his Blue Heron Press, which sold over 50,000 copies despite distribution challenges.[55] While this act of defiance preserved his output, detractors note it exacerbated isolation from mainstream editorial oversight, yielding works un-tempered by critical scrutiny and amplifying doctrinaire elements, as Fast himself later admitted: "when I had to publish my own books, I wrote what I damned well pleased."[56] This period's novels, including Silas Timberman (1954), have been faulted for reinforcing party-line portrayals of American institutions as inherently fascist, forgoing empirical evidence of diverse social reforms in favor of totalizing critiques.[52] Post-resignation critiques from the left, such as those in Communist Party responses to Fast's 1957 memoir The Naked God, accused his oeuvre of insufficient revolutionary fervor even during his membership, portraying his historical epics as sentimental rather than dialectically incisive, thus diluting class antagonism with individualistic heroism.[57] Conversely, conservative observers have lambasted Fast's pre-1956 output as cultural propaganda that sanitized Stalinist totalitarianism, with novels like The American (1946) idealizing revolutionary figures while eliding Soviet purges and gulags contemporaneous to their publication, thereby enabling apologetics for authoritarian regimes under the guise of historical romance.[58] These evaluations underscore a consensus that Fast's political lens, while galvanizing popular interest in underclass narratives, compromised historiographic fidelity, as evidenced by the novels' selective sourcing—favoring dialectical materialism over primary accounts—and their alignment with CPUSA cultural directives during the Popular Front and wartime periods.[52] Defenses, including Fast's own assertions of artistic autonomy, maintain that such influences enriched empathetic portrayals of oppression, yet causal analysis reveals ideology as the primary driver of interpretive distortions, substantiated by archival party correspondences and comparative textual studies.[54]Later Career and Legacy
Post-Communist Writings
Following his resignation from the Communist Party in 1956, Fast published The Naked God: The Writer and the Communist Party in 1957, a memoir in which he condemned the party's suppression of intellectual freedom and its alignment with Stalinist totalitarianism, marking an early break from his prior ideological commitments.[29] In this work, Fast reflected on how party demands distorted his creative output, leading him to reject the "naked god" of communist orthodoxy that prioritized dogma over truth.[59] This critique extended to broader disillusionment with Soviet policies, though Fast retained sympathy for egalitarian ideals without endorsing revolutionary violence. Fast's literary productivity remained high in the ensuing decades, yielding dozens of novels and nonfiction works through the 1990s, often emphasizing historical family sagas over explicit calls for proletarian uprising.[60] His style retained the sweeping narrative scope of earlier historical fiction, but with tempered political messaging that explored personal ambition and societal flaws in capitalist America. Notable among these was the Lavette Family series, beginning with The Immigrants in 1977, which chronicled the multigenerational ascent of Italian and Jewish immigrants in early 20th-century San Francisco, portraying the American Dream as a mix of opportunity, exploitation, and moral compromise.[61] Subsequent volumes—Second Generation (1978), The Establishment (1979), The Legacy (1981), and The Immigrant's Daughter (1985)—continued this focus on familial resilience amid economic booms, labor strife, and cultural assimilation, critiquing both unchecked capitalism's inequalities and the rigidities of inherited radicalism.[62] By the late 1970s, Fast had reconciled with mainstream publishers after years of self-publishing during the blacklist era, regaining commercial success as The Immigrants became a bestseller and revitalized his market presence.[63] This period saw over 20 additional titles, including The Confession of Joe Cullen (1994), shifting emphasis from revolutionary heroism to individual ethical dilemmas within American history, reflecting a post-ideological maturity while sustaining sales through accessible, character-driven plots.[16] Later memoirs, such as reflections in the 1970s and beyond, balanced repudiations of Stalinism with measured critiques of American materialism, underscoring Fast's evolved stance against both extremes.[36]Screenwriting and Broader Impact
Fast initially drafted the screenplay for the 1960 film Spartacus, directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Kirk Douglas, based on his 1951 novel of the same name; however, blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo substantially revised and completed it under a pseudonym before receiving official credit.[40] The film earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay, along with five other nominations, contributing to its status as a landmark epic that grossed over $60 million domestically on a $12 million budget.[64] Fast's other screenwriting credits include the 1966 comedy Penelope, starring Natalie Wood, and contributions to television adaptations such as the 1974 miniseries The Lives of Benjamin Franklin and the 1965 film Mirage.[65] These efforts extended his narratives from print to visual media, amplifying their reach amid Hollywood's post-McCarthy era transitions. Beyond cinema, Fast's oeuvre exerted a measurable influence on popular culture through widespread dissemination and pedagogical use. His books, numbering over 80, have sold more than 80 million copies globally and been translated into 82 languages, facilitating their integration into educational curricula focused on historical fiction, where works like Spartacus and April Morning serve as accessible entry points to themes of rebellion and American independence.[66][36] This longevity stems from his vivid reconstructions of underdog protagonists challenging entrenched powers, which resonated in mid-20th-century leftist cultural circles by framing history through lenses of collective resistance.[67] Critics, however, have noted persistent ideological residues in these adaptations and originals, where Fast's earlier Marxist sympathies manifest in simplified causal chains—often reducing multifaceted power dynamics to binary oppressor-oppressed conflicts, thereby eliding economic incentives, cultural contingencies, or individual variances in historical agency.[54] Such portrayals, while commercially potent, have drawn accusations of didacticism, prioritizing moral teleology over empirical granularity, as evidenced in analyses of his recurrent proletarian heroes who improbably triumph through unity alone.[52] Despite these limitations, Fast's media extensions cemented his role in shaping mass perceptions of antiquity and Americana, influencing subsequent historical dramas by embedding egalitarian motifs that persist in educational and entertainment contexts.Death and Posthumous Assessments
Howard Fast died on March 12, 2003, in Old Greenwich, Connecticut, at the age of 88 from natural causes.[68][1] Posthumous evaluations of Fast's legacy have centered on the interplay between his narrative prowess and ideological entanglements, with scholars dissecting the personal and artistic toll of his Communist Party allegiance. Gerald Sorin's 2012 biography, Howard Fast: Life and Literature in the Left Lane, presents Fast as a product of Jewish immigrant struggles and leftist fervor, crediting his party loyalty for fueling resilient output amid persecution while underscoring its constraints on creative autonomy and moral reckoning.[69] Sorin attributes Fast's enduring appeal to works blending historical drama with egalitarian advocacy, yet notes how uncritical Soviet sympathies, including acceptance of the 1954 Stalin Peace Prize, compromised his detachment.[69] Detractors in these assessments fault Fast's incomplete disavowal of Stalinism following his 1956 party resignation—triggered by Khrushchev's secret speech—as enabling apologetics for gulags and purges, with critics like those in Cold War analyses highlighting his postwar tracts and reluctance to atone for victims as markers of ideological blind spots persisting into independence.[70][71] Conversely, proponents valorize Fast's defiance of congressional inquisitions and blacklist-era hardships, viewing his post-party historical novels as testaments to unyielding commitment to underdog narratives over orthodoxy.[6] This duality frames Fast not merely as propagandist but as a flawed chronicler whose politics amplified both inspirational reach and ethical lapses, per balanced retrospectives.[72]Personal Life
Marriages and Family
Fast married Beatrice "Bette" Cohen, a painter and sculptor, on June 6, 1937.[11] Their union produced two children: son Jonathan, born April 13, 1948, who later became a novelist, and daughter Rachel.[1] [73] The couple resided primarily in New York and Connecticut, prioritizing family privacy amid Fast's demanding writing career; Bette occasionally collaborated with him on projects, such as co-authoring The Picture-Book History of the Jews.[15] This marriage endured for 57 years until Bette's death on November 9, 1994.[73] Following Bette's passing, Fast wed Mercedes Aline O'Connor in 1999.[1] O'Connor, who had three sons—Connor Denis, and two others—from a prior relationship, integrated into the family structure, with Fast settling in Old Greenwich, Connecticut.[1] Fast's children from his first marriage, Jonathan of Greenwich and Rachel Ben Avi of Sarasota, Florida, outlived him, along with grandchildren.[1] Throughout his life, Fast disclosed few personal family details publicly, emphasizing domestic stability and shielding relatives from external scrutiny.[11]Health and Final Years
In his later years, Howard Fast resided in Old Greenwich, Connecticut, a suburb where he had lived for approximately two decades by the early 2000s.[38][74] Following the death of his first wife, Bette Cohen, with whom he had been married since 1943, Fast wed Mercedes O'Connor (also known as Mimi Fast) in 1999; she brought three sons to the marriage and survived him.[16] He was also survived by two children from his first marriage—son Jonathan Fast, a novelist, and daughter Rachel Ben Avi—as well as three grandchildren.[1] Fast maintained physical activity into his mid-80s, including daily exercise, which he credited for his trim appearance and vitality in a 2000 interview at age 85.[38] However, he experienced the typical physical limitations of advanced age, dying of natural causes at his Old Greenwich home on March 12, 2003, at the age of 88.[68][66][1]Bibliography
Novels
Fast produced over 50 novels under his own name and the pseudonym E.V. Cunningham, many self-published or issued via small presses during the Hollywood blacklist of the early 1950s when major publishers refused him due to his Communist Party affiliations.[75] [76] His works frequently drew on historical events to examine themes of resistance, class conflict, and individual agency, with early efforts reflecting the Great Depression's influence on proletarian literature. Early novels from the 1930s to 1940s established Fast's focus on American social history:- Two Valleys (1933), his debut at age 18, depicting immigrant life in New York.[16]
- The Children (1935), exploring urban poverty among youth.
- Place in the City (1937), addressing labor unrest.
- Conceived in Liberty (1939), a tale of the American Revolution.
- The Last Frontier (1941), chronicling a Cheyenne uprising.
- The Unvanquished (1942), on Southern Reconstruction.
- Citizen Tom Paine (1943), a biography-novel of the revolutionary figure.
- Freedom Road (1944), portraying post-Civil War Black political empowerment in the South.[77]