Great bio on Stone, but also a great introduction on the days of the 'fronts' in the thirties and their changing connections with American journalism and politics in general. The author does a great job displaying the stages fellow travelers went through in America. Naturally, the author keeps to the timeline of his main subject's life in describing left politics in America. The thirties became the golden age of leftist activism in America due to New Deal prominence, or should I say dominance, on the political scene. Disparate characters of all kinds on the left could be found playing nice. And Izzy was more often than not at the center of it all. The Pact of Steele ended recess, and ushered Stone into an adversarial position against the Soviet Union, but the left, while somewhat chastened by Stalin's realpolitik, still had a place to sup at the table of American politics; especially after Germany invaded Russia, to Stalin's acute dismay. After the war against fascism, America turned to the war against communism and everyone veering to the left feared detention. Even Stone, or at least his passport..... Stone's biography in the second half becomes a sad examination of an independent journalist struggling to find meaning when he's caught between two superpowers willing to lie, cheat, and kill to further their aims; or so Stone thought. Living in one, emotionally attached to the other created an interesting ambivalence which fueled Stone's emotive journalism. Stone reported less than interpreted the news In his Weekly. Obviously Stone preferred the pretensions of communist/socialist ideology over American democratic freedom, but the ending of the Prague Spring proved to him there was no safe ground where one could entirely enjoy one's political ideals In peace, or not on this earth anyway. Israel was probably as close as he would get in his search for truth in both theory and practice. At the end of his life he spent his time reading the Torah and Greek classics. Ending one's life breaking the Socrates story seems a maudlin finish for a journalist who had once intimidated the NSA to such a degree that they subscribed faithfully to the Stone Weekly too.....