The Establishment

The Establishment

by Howard Fast
The Establishment

The Establishment

by Howard Fast

eBook

$12.99  $16.99 Save 24% Current price is $12.99, Original price is $16.99. You Save 24%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

She'll stand up for her family, no matter the cost

Former socialite Barbara Lavette is unconcerned about the gossip that surrounds her new marriage. However, her husband Bernie, a poor mechanic whom she met in the midst of World War II, is willing to do anything to prove his worth to her as well as the society that shuns him.

Barbara will support her husband in any way she can, but when she becomes the victim of an attack by the Congressional Committee on Un-American Activities, she is forced to stand trial. Caught in a Communist witch hunt, Barbara must do whatever it takes to defend her values, clear her name, and find a way to reunite her family.

The third book in Howard Fast's epic family saga, The Establishment follows the Lavette family as they attempt to persevere in a nation consumed with fear during the tumultuous period following World War II.

Praise for The Immigrants series:

"Relentless pace of events…real experience leaping full-bodied from Fast's imagination!"—New York Times

"There hasn't been a novel in years that can do a job on readers' emotions that the last fifty pages of The Immigrants does."—Los Angeles Times

"Emotional, exciting, and entertaining."—Philadelphia Inquirer


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781402257452
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Publication date: 09/01/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 448
Sales rank: 156,837
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Born in 1914, Howard Fast published over 53 novels, including numerous New York Times Bestsellers. His writing has been praised by the New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune and Time magazine. His most famous novels included Spartacus, Freedom Road, My Glorious Brothers, and The Immigrants series.

Read an Excerpt

Cohen, a large, heavyset man of forty-three, was gradually losing his patience, and that would be a prelude to losing his temper and taking it out on everyone around him, and that had been happening too often. Small things, unimportant things, irritated him and provoked him. He had been through too many large things in his life, things that had failed to provoke him, not to realize that something unpleasant and corrosive was happening to him. He had fallen into a pattern of swallowing anger, frustration, and annoyance, remaining fairly unconscious of what was building up inside him. Now he exploded at the meek little woman who faced him.

"God damn it, Mrs. Melcher, I am trying to explain to you why this happens! You ride the damn clutch! A clutch is not something God made, like a horse's rump. It's a mechanism for connecting and disconnecting the engine and the transmission. There's a springloaded pressure plate, which is surfaced on both sides with friction material. Your foot is always on the damn pedal, and it shouldn't be. You have to learn how to drive. It happened before, and it will happen again."

She turned white and whispered, "You have no right to talk to me like that. You have no right to."

He stared down at her. "Oh, Jesus," he said to himself. Gomez, one of his mechanics, was watching him. He dropped his voice and apologized.

"You have no right to talk to me like that," Mrs. Melcher complained, on the point of tears, as if there were no other words she could imagine.

"I'm sorry. We'll fix the car. You'll have it tomorrow."

He turned and stalked through the garage to the men's room at the rear, locked the door behind him, slammed down the toilet cover, and sat there with his chin propped on his clenched, grimy fists. On the door facing him, surrounded by expressions of witless smut, someone had scrawled: "There was an old hermit called Dave, who kept a dead girl in his cave. He said, 'I'll admit I'm a bit of a shit, but think of the money I save.'" He stared at the words at first without comprehension. They hadn't been there the day before. Then, suddenly, everything bottled up inside him exploded. He kicked the door open and roared out at his four mechanics, "I want this goddamn toilet painted! Today! And the next one of you mothers who writes on the walls gets booted out of here on his ass!"

With the mechanics staring at him in amazement, he strode across the garage and into the little glass-walled office. A knot of pain swelled in his stomach as he dropped down behind his desk. He breathed deeply and stared at the inkstained blotter and wondered whether he was developing an ulcer. That would be the final ignominy. An ulcer or a heart attack. He was a big, heavily muscled man, and the last time he had undergone a physical examination, the doctor had warned him that he was the physical type that suffered the greatest incidence of early coronary.

Gomez opened the door of the office gingerly. "Hey, Bernie," he said softly, "something bad happen?"

He stared at Gomez without replying. Gomez, a small, skinny competent Chicano, was the foreman of the shop.

"You really want the crapper painted, Bernie? We're loaded with work."

"Forget it."

"You let them crazy dames get under your skin. Two guys here, they want to see you."

"Take care of it."

"They want to see you."

"About what?"

"I don't know." Gomez spread his arms. "Bernie, Jesus, what is with you? You got good men working here. We give you a day's work, and you chew our asses off. I stand here arguing with you. These guys, they don't want a car job. They want to talk to Mr. Cohen. Talk to them, huh? Let me get back to work."

Cohen nodded. Gomez left the office, and a few moments later, the door opened, and two men entered Cohen's office. One was a slight, sandy-haired man in his mid-thirties. He had bright blue eyes, a pale mustache, and a scar that ran from his temple to his chin. The other man was younger, twenty-three or twenty-four at the most, Cohen decided, plump, with a round, pink-cheeked, baby face. They came into the office and stood facing Cohen, and the pink-cheeked man said, "That's him?"

"That's him," said the sandy-haired man.

Cohen stood up slowly, staring at the sandy-haired man, who grinned at him complacently.

"He is one big sonofabitch," the pink-cheeked man said. Cohen came around the desk, stared for a moment more, and then threw his arms around the sandy-haired man, sweeping him up in an enormous bear hug. The pink-cheeked man watched and nodded.

"You're killing me with affection, you dumb slob," the sandyhaired man managed to say.

Cohen let go of him.

"This is Herbie Goodman," the sandy-haired man said. "Herbie, I want you to meet Bernie Cohen."

They shook hands. "You're a legend," Herbie said. "You are
absolutely a legend."

"How in hell did you find me?" Cohen asked.

"We got our ways. You'd be surprised what ways we got."

Table of Contents

Contents

PART ONE

Marriage 1

PART TWO

Games 65

PART THREE

Inquisition 135

PART FOUR

Trial 201

PART FIVE

Punishment 309

PART SIX

Memory 403

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews