American Scoundrel
Roy Cohn's Dark Journey from Joe McCarthy to Donald Trump
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- Reserva
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- Lanzamiento previsto: 1 sept 2026
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- 19,99 €
Descripción editorial
“A narrative masterwork. Bird vividly creates the sinister web of charm and deceit that Cohn was able to spin through his decades at the very center of power.” —Marie Brenner, award-winning writer-at-large for Vanity Fair and coproducer of the documentary Where’s My Roy Cohn?
From the Pulitzer Prize–winning coauthor of American Prometheus, inspiration for the box-office sensation Oppenheimer, a penetrating biography of super-lawyer and political fixer Roy Cohn, whose shocking exploits over four decades have shaped the modern political era, most prominently the ascent of Donald Trump.
From the 1950s to the 1980s, the many dramas of American political life had one common denominator: Roy Cohn. In his twenties, the infamous young prosecutor sent Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to the electric chair, and as the chief aide to Senator Joe McCarthy became the baby-faced symbol of ruthless communist-hunting. By his thirties, Cohn had begun working as the Mafia’s hired legal gun. In his forties, he was an informal adviser to Richard Nixon. In his fifties, he partied with the glitterati at Studio 54 and visited the Reagan White House where he traded gossip with the first lady. Perhaps most significant, Cohn mentored the young Donald Trump, who telephoned the older man daily and studiously emulated not only his mannerisms but core philosophies.
Years after his death in 1986 from AIDS-related complications, Cohn emerged as a central figure in Tony Kushner’s Pulitzer Prize–winning play Angels in America. Cohn’s feistiness, his surly defiance—and, yes, his charm—were frequently flourished to conceal vast insecurities, particularly regarding his closeted sexuality.
A street fighter, self-promoting hustler, and a true Zelig of the dark side, Cohn was a nefarious actor in a startling number of history-shaping events whose influence resonates to the present day.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Pulitzer Prize winner Bird (American Prometheus) and researcher Goldmark present an astonishing biography of lawyer and fixer Roy Cohn. Born in the Bronx to a banking heiress and a judge, Cohn (1927–1986) came by his infamous knack for dealmaking honestly—his parents' marriage was "a calculated transaction" between his father and maternal grandfather, who traded his daughter for a judgeship. With his father eventually appointed to the state supreme court, Cohn benefited from his family's prominence, as with his admission to Columbia Law School after an initial rejection, which taught him to "bend the rules, so long as he had the right connections." The authors follow Cohn in his most notorious roles, including as prime mover of the Rosenberg executions, for which he remained unrepentant; as the book-burning "baby-faced symbol of McCarthyism"; and as a lawyer for clients as diverse as mafia dons, Studio 54, and Donald Trump, who took from Cohn his defiance of rules and tabloid manipulation. The book excels as a masterful dissection of Cohn's strange, contradictory, and immoral character as "a lawyer dismissive of the law," as well as a keen interrogation of Cohn's ceaseless popularity among New York City and Beltway high society, where many expressed repulsion at Cohn's politics and corruption, yet were drawn to his charisma, aptitude for gossip, and transactional loyalty. It adds up to an extraordinary portrait of a singular American figure whose callousness and brazenness continue to mar the country 40 years after his death.