Ethel Rosenberg’s story is America’s Dreyfus Affair: a catastrophic failure of humanity and justice that continues to haunt the national conscience.
Anne Sebba speaks to Suzannah Lipscomb about her revelatory new biography of the woman caught up in one of the Cold War’s great controversies. Executed for a crime she almost certainly didn’t commit, her tragic story reveals what happens when a government motivated by fear tramples on the rights of its citizens.
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Anne Sebba is one of Britain’s most distinguished biographers. Formerly a Reuters correspondent based in London and Rome, she has written ten works of non-fiction, mostly about iconic women, and presented BBC radio documentaries. She is the author of the international bestsellers That Woman, an acclaimed biography of Wallis Simpson, Duchess of Windsor, and Les Parisiennes: How the Women of Paris Lived, Loved and Died Under Nazi Occupation. She is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Historical Research.
Suzannah Lipscomb is an award-winning historian, author, and broadcaster. Her books include 1536: The Year that Changed Henry VIII, the Ladybird Expert book Witchcraft and The Voices of Nîmes: Women, Sex, and Marriage in Reformation Languedoc.