Jeff Kisseloff is a former newspaper reporter and editor whose writing has appeared in the New York Times, The Nation, and elsewhere. He is also the author of five books, including Generation on Fire: Voices of Protest from the 1960s-An Oral History, The Box: An Oral History of Television, 1920 to 1961, and You Must Remember This: An Oral History of Manhattan from the 1890s to World War II.
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"Alger Hiss vs. Whittaker Chambers. It was the most politically explosive trial of the twentieth century. And while many historians believe the case is settled history, now comes Jeff Kisseloff with an indictment against the conventional wisdom. Kisseloff presents meticulous evidence to portray Chambers as a serial fabulist. Die-hard believers in Hiss's guilt will be outraged. But clearly, they have not had the last word. This book is sure to stir a hornet's nest of controversy." - Kai Bird, coauthor of American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer"Jeff Kisseloff has written three books in one, each an amazing story that deserves the words 'gripping' and 'compelling.' One is the personal memoir of a curious college student who devotes fifty years to a search for the truth of what happened to Alger Hiss, written with wry humor. The second, the story of the collection of oddballs that Kisseloff encountered on the Hiss defense team, who bickered endlessly but shared a dogged search for evidence to challenge a truly 'rigged' prosecution. The third is the case Kisseloff makes that Hiss was not only innocent of espionage, but was framed by a cabal of unscrupulous ideologues out to destroy the New Deal with Hiss as their evidence of its Communist subversion. I defy anyone with an open mind to read this book and dispute its conclusion that a grave injustice was done to a devoted public servant. This is, truthfully, the most important book ever written on the Hiss case. Kudos to Jeff Kisseloff for the research Hiss's detractors never did, but we now have." - Peter Irons, author of Cold War Crusaders: Harry Truman and the Architects of McCarthyism "Civic injustices that remain unaddressed do not vanish, but fester, poisoning the body politic and leading to an underlying cynicism. Jeff Kisseloff, working to undo one such injustice, has devoted much of his life to investigating the circumstances surrounding the 1950 conviction of Alger Hiss for perjury. In this riveting account of impeccable journalistic research, Kisseloff leads us step-by-step to the perpetrators of the deception that destroyed the career of one of America's finest civil servants and fed a culture of fear and division that harmed countless others." - Julia M. Allen, author of Passionate Commitments: The Lives of Anna Rochester and Grace Hutchins "Part detective story and part meticulous historical scholarship, this book is about more than a single man's struggle to clear his name. The detailed case made for Alger Hiss's innocence based on access to previously unreleased government documents is both compelling in itself and the entryway into a broader drama: how the persecution of one man by powerful government agencies can be a battering ram against democracy for all. Rewriting Hisstory is ambitious, provocative, and timely." - Max Elbaum, coeditor of Power Concedes Nothing: How Grassroots Organizing Wins Elections

