Boston is the novelized account of the Sacco and Vanzetti affair, which rocked the nation—and the world—in the 1920s. Two working-class Italian immigrants, both associated with radical political beliefs, stood accused of the murder of two armed guards during the commission of a payroll robbery.
There was scant (and often conflicting) evidence of their guilt. However at that time the nation was racked with a heightened fear of the “Red Menace” in the wake of the rise of Socialism and Communism in Europe and the triumph of the 1919 revolution in Russia. Anarchists stood accused of having committed terrorist bombings in America and both Sacco and Vanzetti had been members of Anarchist groups, though neither man had any history of crime or violence.
Many Americans at the time harbored irrational fear and hatred of the new waves of immigrants, mostly from Eastern and Southern Europe. They came to America to leave countries and economies left in ruins by the Great War and fill the jobs in America’s booming industries. They looked different than previous waves of immigrants and spoke unfamiliar languages.
The arrest and conviction of Sacco and Vanzetti for the robbery and murders was seen by millions as driven mainly by the prejudice against them as Italian immigrants and political radicals—rather than actual evidence of their guilt. Millions of others believed just the opposite. The men were executed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in August of 1927.
Sinclair’s novel weaves actual historical facts, stories, and persons with persons and events he created for the purpose of telling an interesting story, with more and deeper historical context. He twice interviewed Vanzetti during his imprisonment. He refrains from coming to any specific conclusion regarding guilt or innocence and focuses more on the blatantly unfair trial and the climate of fear and prejudice which surrounded the public debate.
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“A literary achievement…wrought into a narrative on the heroic scale with form and coherence.”
— New York Times
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Upton Sinclair (1878–1968) was a journalist, a prominent social and political activist, and the author of over one hundred books, including the novel Dragon’s Teeth, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1943. He is perhaps best known for The Jungle, the dramatic exposé of the Chicago meat-packing industry that prompted the investigation by Theodore Roosevelt that culminated in the pure-food legislation of 1906.
Peter Lerman is originally from New York City. Peter has narrated over 150 audiobooks and has won an AudioFile Magazine Earphones Award® in 2020 for one of them. His specialty is nonfiction—biography, history, government and politics, business, science, medicine, and technology. In 2023 Peter recorded the first audiobook production of Upton Sinclair’s Boston: the Documentary Novel of Sacco and Vanzetti.