I am not sure what I expected when I picked this book up from bookoutlet. As a history major in University, I knew about the Rosenburg case. I also watched a few documentaries on their story which always ask the same questions; were they guilty or not? Or, worse yet, was Julius guilty, and Ethel was an innocent person sent to execution? It is really possible that two innocent people were sent to the electric chair by their own government? After all this, I could not resist a book written by the youngest son of the Rosenburg's.
If you pick this book up expecting a "poor me" story from Robert, you will be very disappointed. From the first page of this book, I could not put it down. Robert, given the fact that he was six when his parents were executed, does not have much to share about his life with them. He adds what he can but, the majority of this story is about Robert's life after the execution of his biological parents. Of any first hand account I have read of someone losing their parents in any way, Robert's story is one that I will always remember. The biggest lesson I took from his story was that of resilience. Robert and his older brother, Michael, could have hid for their entire lives behind their adoptive name, Meeropol. They could have stormed the government as young men to demand answers for their parents. They could have gotten involved in substance use and/or criminal activity as a way of "coping" with what happened to them. They did none of those things though, despite Robert's one arrest as a young man for demonstrations. Instead, they both worked hard, explored their own interests in life, and went down their own paths. They both chose the world of academics, and then further their reach into to philanthropy as a way to honor their parents. They turned what happened to them as young children into something positive moving forward. Perhaps one day the name Rosenburg will not be linked to the Communist party and espionage. Maybe one day it will be associated with helping children to overcome their own challenges in life.
You have to embrace yours past in order to move forward with your future. 5 stars for a book I could not put down.