This Week's Book Review - The Double Life of Katharine Clark

The Double Life of Katherine Clark
Looking for a good read? Here is a recommendation. I have an unusual approach to reviewing books. I review books I feel merit a review. Each review is an opportunity to recommend a book. If I do not think a book is worth reading, I find another book to review. You do not have to agree with everything every author has written (I do not), but the fiction I review is entertaining (and often thought-provoking) and the non-fiction contain ideas worth reading.

Book Review

A Journalist and a Spy

Reviewed by Mark Lardas
July 31, 2022

“The Double Life of Katharine Clark: The Untold Story of the American Journalist Who Brought the Truth about Communism to the West,” by Katharine Gregorio, Sourcebooks, 2022, 384 pages, $16.99 (Paperback), $9.99 (E-book)

Katherine Clark was an investigative reporter active between the 1940s and 1960s. She was the first femail Allied war correspondent entering Berlin in 1945. Her 1950s beat was Eastern Europe. There she spoke truth to power, what investigative reporters are supposed to do. But she spoke the wrong kind of truth about the wrong kind of power. So, unlike those widely lionized today, like I.F. Stone, Clark has been allowed to be forgotten. Until now.

“The Double Life of Katharine Clark: The Untold Story of the American Journalist Who Brought the Truth about Communism to the West,” by Katharine Gregorio, brings Clark’s biography to the attention of a new generation of Americans. What a story it is.

Gregorio focuses the story on Clark’s Eastern European years, when Clark covered anti-Soviet uprisings in Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. More importantly it reveals her efforts on behalf of Milovan Djilas, one-time vice-president of Yugoslavia. An ardent Communist who became disaffected with Communism, he was stripped of his position and the privileges and power that went with it after speaking up against its totalitarianism.

Clark, then a stringer, was living in Yugoslavia with her husband, a correspondent for Time. They had befriended Djilas and his family before his fall. Their friendship continued afterwards. This friendship led her to helped Djilas publish magazine articles and two landmark books, “The New Class,” and “Land without Justice” in the West. These were among the first works from within the Iron Curtain revealing the failures of Communism. Clark helped translate these works into English, smuggled them out of Yugoslavia, and find publishers for them.

Gregorio’s story is factual, but it reads like a John le Carre or Alan Furst spy thriller. Gregorio takes readers into the forgotten world of 1950s Communism. She shows how Clark and her husband worked in the Communist system’s cracks and evaded the secret police to cover stories and get Djilas’s documents to the Free World. Gregorio also shows the challenges Clark faced as a woman reporter in the then-male dominated news industry.

“The Double Life of Katharine Clark” is an exciting read. It retrieves Katherine Clark from ill-deserved obscurity. Clark was Gregorio’s great-aunt, which gave Gregorio access to family lore and Clark’s archives. Gregorio combined that with extensive period research. The result is a story that holds special relevance today, when so many are infatuated with socialism, forgetting the past’s lessons of its flaws.

Mark Lardas, an engineer, freelance writer, historian, and model-maker, lives in League City, TX. His website is marklardas.com. This review appeared in a different form in American Essence magazine and Epoch Times.

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There is no wikipedia article on Katharine Clark, probably because she was anti-communist.

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