The Plot Against America

by Philip Roth

Philip Roth Character Analysis

The narrator and protagonist of the novel, the “Philip Roth” of the book is a fictionalized younger version of author Philip Roth. He’s Herman and Bess’s son and Sandy’s younger brother. By fictionalizing his own childhood—and using the names of many members of his immediate family in so doing—Roth is better able to paint a portrait of a family authentically reacting to an unprecedented new chapter in American history and in Jewish life. The young Philip has been raised on his father, Herman’s, belief in the promises of the American dream. Obsessed with stamp-collecting, FDR, and baseball, Philip leads an idyllic American life—yet as Lindbergh is elected to the presidency and warnings of America going “fascist” begin seeping into Philip’s neighborhood, Philip becomes deeply perturbed and desperate to find a way out of the nightmare that has become his life. Just seven years old at the start of the novel and only nine at its end, Philip’s childlike understanding of the world around him is made all the more profound by the swift changes in America that take place during Roth’s alternate history of the years 1940–1942. As Philip’s brother Sandy becomes a mouthpiece for Lindbergh’s programs aimed at assimilating Jews, and their cousin Alvin flees to Canada to fight for the British against Hitler, Philip finds himself lonely and confused, uncertain of the very ground beneath his feet. He’s consumed by thoughts of war, of conflicting emotions about his own idol worship of FDR, of Lindbergh, and of America itself. Yet Philip is still plagued by day-to-day playground woes and the challenges of growing up, and he becomes a refractive lens through which Roth explores the changing landscapes of New Jersey, the U.S., and indeed the entire world. Naïve, curious, lonesome, and occasionally vindictive, Philip continually finds himself swept away by the tides of change as he struggles to make sense of a hostile and deeply flawed world.

Philip Roth Quotes in The Plot Against America

The The Plot Against America quotes below are all either spoken by Philip Roth or refer to Philip Roth. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Jewish Identity vs. Assimilation Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

“Alvin’s going to go to Canada and join the Canadian army,” he said. “He’s going to fight for the British against Hitler.”

“But nobody can beat Roosevelt,” I said.

“Lindbergh’s going to. America’s going to go fascist.”

Then we just stood there together under the intimidating spell of the three portraits [of Lindbergh.]

Related Characters: Sanford “Sandy” Roth (speaker), Philip Roth (speaker), Charles Lindbergh, Adolf Hitler , Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR), Alvin Roth
Page Number and Citation: 26
Explanation and Analysis:

Harmless enough, and yet it drove some of the mothers crazy who had to hear us at it for hours on end through their open windows. “Can’t you kids do something else? Can’t you find another game to play?” But we couldn’t—declaring war was all we thought about too.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 28
Explanation and Analysis:

It was when I looked next at the album’s facing page to see what, if anything, had happened to my 1934 National Parks set of ten that I fell out of the bed and woke up on the floor, this time screaming. […] Across the face of each, […] across everything in America that was the bluest and the greenest and the whitest and to be preserved forever in these pristine reservations, was printed a black swastika.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Sanford “Sandy” Roth
Related Symbols: Philip’s Stamps
Page Number and Citation: 43
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 2 Quotes

We had driven right to the very heart of American history, and whether we knew it in so many words, it was American history, delineated in its most inspirational form, that we were counting on to protect us against Lindbergh.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Herman Roth, Charles Lindbergh, Sanford “Sandy” Roth, Bess Roth
Page Number and Citation: 58
Explanation and Analysis:

It was from there that we heard him refer to my father as “a loudmouth Jew,” followed a moment later by the elderly lady declaring, “I’d give anything to slap his face.”

Mr. Taylor led us quickly away to a smaller hall just off the main chamber where there was a tablet inscribed with the Gettysburg Address and a mural whose theme was the Emancipation.

“To hear words like that in a place like this,” said my father, his choked voice quivering with indignation. “In a shrine to a man like this!”

Related Characters: Herman Roth (speaker), Philip Roth (speaker), Mr. Taylor, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 65
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 3 Quotes

“An independent destiny for America”—that was the phrase Lindbergh repeated some fifteen times in his State of the Union speech and again at the close of his address on the night of June 22. When I asked my father to explain what the words meant […] he frowned and said, “It means turning our back on our friends. It means making friends with their enemies. You know what it means, son? It means destroying everything that America stands for.”

Related Characters: Herman Roth (speaker), Philip Roth (speaker), Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

“The Jews of America […] are unlike any other community of Jews in the history of the world. […] The Jews of America can participate fully in the national life of their country. They need no longer dwell apart, a pariah community separated from the rest.”

Related Characters: Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf (speaker), Aunt Evelyn, Philip Roth, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 106-107
Explanation and Analysis:

We never followed anybody we thought was Jewish. They didn’t interest us. Our curiosity was directed at men, the adult Christian men who worked all day in downtown Newark. Where did they go when they went home?

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Earl Axman, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 116
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 4 Quotes

“Alvin can’t bear your president,” my father replied, “that’s why he went to Canada. Not so long ago you couldn’t bear the man either. But now this anti-Semite is your friend. The Depression is over, all you rich Jews tell me, and thanks not to Roosevelt but to Mr. Lindbergh. The stock market is up, profits are up, business is booming—and why? Because we have Lindbergh’s peace instead of Roosevelt’s war.”

Related Characters: Herman Roth (speaker), Alvin Roth (speaker), Uncle Monty (speaker), Bess Roth, Charles Lindbergh, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR), Philip Roth, Aunt Evelyn
Page Number and Citation: 124
Explanation and Analysis:

“Is it healed?” I asked him.

“Not yet.”

“How long will it take?”

“Forever,” he replied.

I was stunned. Then this is endless! I thought.

“Extremely frustrating,” Alvin said. “You get on the leg they make for you and the stump breaks down. You get on crutches and it starts to swell up. The stump goes bad whatever you do.”

Related Characters: Alvin Roth (speaker), Philip Roth (speaker)
Related Symbols: Alvin’s Prosthesis
Page Number and Citation: 136-137
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 5 Quotes

Gone were the wall banners proclaiming “Wake up America—Smash Jewish Communists!” […] and the big white buttons with the black lettering that had been distributed to Bund members to stick into their lapels, the buttons that read:

KEEP AMERICA
OUT OF
THE JEWISH WAR

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 176-177
Explanation and Analysis:

My brother had discovered in himself the uncommon gift to be somebody, and so while making speeches praising President Lindbergh and while exhibiting his drawings of him and while publicly extolling (in words written by Aunt Evelyn) the enriching benefits of his eight weeks as a Jewish farm hand in the Gentile heartland—while doing, if the truth be known, what I wouldn’t have minded doing myself, by doing what was normal and patriotic all over America and aberrant and freakish only in his home—Sandy was having the time of his life.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Sanford “Sandy” Roth, Aunt Evelyn, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 184
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

“And who will I talk to?” she asked. “Who will I have there like the friends I’ve had my whole life?”

“There are women there, too.”

“Gentile women,” she said. […] “Good Christian women,” she said,” who will fall all over themselves to make me feel at home. They have no right to do this!” she proclaimed. […] “this is illegal. You cannot just take Jews because they’re Jews and force them to live where you want them to.”

Related Characters: Bess Roth (speaker), Herman Roth (speaker), Sanford “Sandy” Roth, Philip Roth
Page Number and Citation: 208
Explanation and Analysis:

“I am not running away!” he shouted, startling everyone. “This is our country!” “No, my mother said sadly, “not anymore. It’s Lindbergh’s. It’s the goyim’s. It’s their country,” she said, and her breaking voice and the shocking words and the nightmare immediacy of what was mercilessly real forced my father […] to see himself with mortifying clarity: a devoted father of titanic energy no more capable of protecting his family from harm than was Mr. Wishnow hanging dead in the closet.

Related Characters: Bess Roth (speaker), Herman Roth (speaker), Mr. Wishnow, Philip Roth, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 226
Explanation and Analysis:

“I lived in Kentucky! Kentucky is one of the forty-eight states! Human beings live there like they do everywhere else! It is not a concentration camp! This guy makes millions selling his shitty hand lotion—and you people believe him!”

“I already told you about the dirty words, and now I’m telling you about this ‘you people’ business. ‘You people’ one more time, son, and I am going to ask you to leave the house.”

Related Characters: Herman Roth (speaker), Sanford “Sandy” Roth (speaker), Philip Roth, Walter Winchell, Bess Roth
Page Number and Citation: 230
Explanation and Analysis:

“But who could have taken them? Where could they be? They’re mine! We’ve got to find them! They’re my stamps!

I was inconsolable. I envisioned a horde of orphans spotting the album in the woods and tearing it apart with their filthy hands. I saw them pulling out the stamps and eating them and stomping on them and flushing them by the handful down the toilet in their terrible bathroom. They hated the album because it wasn’t theirs—they hated the album because nothing was theirs.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker)
Related Symbols: Philip’s Stamps
Page Number and Citation: 236
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 7 Quotes

Of course, that no Jew could ever be elected to the presidency—least of all a Jew with a mouth as unstoppable as Winchell’s—even a kid as young as I was already accepted, as if the proscription were laid out in so many words in the U.S. Constitution. Yet not even that ironclad certainty could stop the adults from abandoning common sense and, for a night or two, imagining themselves and their children as native-born citizens of Paradise.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Walter Winchell, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 244-245
Explanation and Analysis:

“Well, like it or not, Lindbergh is teaching us what it is to be Jews.” Then she added, “We only think we’re Americans.” “Nonsense. No!” my father replied. “They think we only think we’re Americans. It is not up for discussion, Bess. It is not up for negotiation. These people are not understanding that I take this for granted, goddamnit! Others? He dares to call us others? He’s the other. The one who looks most American—and he’s the one who is least American!”

Related Characters: Bess Roth (speaker), Herman Roth (speaker), Alvin Roth, Philip Roth, Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 255-256
Explanation and Analysis:

A previously unpublicized section of the homesteading plan called the Good Neighbor Project [was] designed to introduce a steadily increasing number of non-Jewish residents into predominantly Jewish neighborhoods and in this way “enrich” the “Americanness” of everyone involved. […] The underlying goal of the Good Neighbor Project like that of Just Folks, was to weaken the solidarity of the Jewish social structure as well as to diminish whatever electoral strength a Jewish community might have in local and congressional elections.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Charles Lindbergh
Page Number and Citation: 280-281
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

A family, my father liked to say, is both peace and war, but this was family war as I could never have imagined it. Spitting into my father’s face the way he’d spit into the face of that dead German soldier!

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Herman Roth, Alvin Roth
Page Number and Citation: 297
Explanation and Analysis:

I wept all the way to school. Our incomparable American childhood was ended. Soon my homeland would be nothing more than my birthplace.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf, Herman Roth
Page Number and Citation: 301
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

My father was a rescuer and orphans were his specialty. A displacement even greater than having to move to Union or to leave for Kentucky was to lose one’s parents and be orphaned. Witness, he would tell you, what had happened to Alvin. Witness what had happened to his sister-in-law after Grandma had died. No one should be motherless and fatherless. Motherless and fatherless you are vulnerable to manipulation, to influences—you are rootless and you are vulnerable to everything.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Herman Roth, Seldon Wishnow, Mrs. Wishnow, Alvin Roth
Page Number and Citation: 358
Explanation and Analysis:

This was how Seldon came to live with us. After their safe return to Newark from Kentucky, Sandy moved into the sun parlor and Seldon took over where Alvin and Aunt Evelyn had left off—as the person in the twin bed next to mine shattered by the malicious indignities of Lindbergh’s America. There was no stump for me to care for this time. The boy himself was the stump, and until he was taken to live with his mother’s married sister in Brooklyn ten months later, I was the prosthesis.

Related Characters: Philip Roth (speaker), Aunt Evelyn, Sanford “Sandy” Roth, Alvin Roth, Seldon Wishnow, Charles Lindbergh, Mrs. Wishnow
Related Symbols: Alvin’s Prosthesis
Page Number and Citation: 361-362
Explanation and Analysis:
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Philip Roth Character Timeline in The Plot Against America

The timeline below shows where the character Philip Roth appears in The Plot Against America. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1: Vote for Lindbergh or Vote for War
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As an older Philip Roth looks back on his childhood, he finds that every memory from his youth is... (full context)
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...neighborhood is predominantly Jewish, the surrounding neighborhoods are predominantly Gentile, or non-Jewish. Though all of Philip’s schoolmates and neighbors are Jewish, he feels that work unites the neighborhood more than religion... (full context)
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...in the Holocaust. The idea of a Jewish national homeland is a distant one to Philip, who says the pledge of allegiance to the only homeland he has ever known in... (full context)
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Lindbergh is—and has been for over a decade—a hero in Philip’s neighborhood, just as he is everywhere else in the nation. Flying nonstop from Long Island... (full context)
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...an “unnecessary insult” against the Nazis. In 1938, Lindbergh was the first famous American whom Philip learned to hate. Lindbergh’s nomination in 1940 represents one of the only “threats” to Philip’s... (full context)
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The only other “threat” Philip can recall took place about a year earlier, in 1939, when his father was offered... (full context)
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Philip looks back to the night of June 27th, 1940—the night of the Republican Convention. After... (full context)
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The next day, Philip’s family and neighbors are comforted by Roosevelt’s “robust response” to Lindbergh’s nomination. Roosevelt, who has... (full context)
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Philip’s brother Sandy is a talented young artist known throughout the neighborhood for his ability to... (full context)
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One day, home alone with Philip, Sandy opens up his portfolio and spreads out on the dining room table several portraits... (full context)
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Philip and his friends have been playing a new game all summer—called “I Declare War,” the... (full context)
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That night, Philip wakes up on the floor—he has rolled out of bed for the second time in... (full context)
Chapter 2: Loudmouth Jew
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...the rebellious Alvin, Alvin rejected Steinheim’s offer to pay for Alvin’s college education at Rutgers. Philip recounts the explosive, lengthy, week-long argument Herman and Alvin had when Herman learned that Alvin... (full context)
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Philip looks back even further, to the November 1940 election—which Lindbergh won in a landslide, earning... (full context)
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Philip is frightened by his parents’ increasing agitation as well as Walter Winchell’s frequent broadcasts about... (full context)
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...begins to cry. As they arrive at their destination safely, Bess apologizes to Sandy and Philip, claiming that she doesn’t feel she lives in a “normal country” anymore. (full context)
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...Bess that they’ll all feel better after a rest. Before leaving the memorial, Herman urges Philip and Sandy to take a long look at the huge statue of Lincoln and enjoy... (full context)
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...Library of Congress—he knows every detail about every place, and Herman admires the man’s smarts. Philip takes his stamp collection with him to each stop. After lunch, Mr. Taylor takes the... (full context)
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...it is not Lindbergh flying today, but instead his wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh. The event, Philip feels, ruins their good time at Mount Vernon, because of the excitement it inspires in... (full context)
Chapter 3: Following Christians
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...its evils” and declares that he is invested in “an independent destiny for America.” As Philip listens to the address with his father, Herman laments that Lindbergh’s “independent destiny” means destroying... (full context)
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...group of erudite New Yorkers and has been known to have affairs with married men. Philip writes that his parents did not realize for several months after that dinner that Evelyn... (full context)
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...summer is up and he arrives home by train, Aunt Evelyn accompanies Herman, Bess, and Philip to pick him up from the station. Sandy is heavier and taller, and his hair... (full context)
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That night in bed, Philip asks Sandy all about his summer in Kentucky and listens as Sandy rapturously describes life... (full context)
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...he put on a pleasant face about it. Herman is angrier than ever lately, and Philip has watched as his father has become slowly consumed by news about the war abroad.... (full context)
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...models not just for one another, but for the adults in their lives as well. Philip is anxious as he waits for his father to stand up to the rabbi as... (full context)
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...tale is especially tragic because there was no need for him to go to war. Philip finds himself confused and distraught as he tries to understand how Bengelsdorf can support a... (full context)
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Bess takes a job selling dresses at a department store in town. She tells Philip and Sandy that she has taken the job in preparation for the additional expenses that... (full context)
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Philip starts spending all of his time with his “stamp mentor” Earl, getting into all kinds... (full context)
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Philip is often anxious during his outings with Earl—but more than fearful, he is excited by... (full context)
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Philip’s final trip with Earl occurs a few days before Christmas vacation. They board a bus... (full context)
Chapter 4: The Stump
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...meet him at the train station. As Alvin’s train pulls in, Herman and Bess warn Philip not to be afraid of Alvin—or of his leg. Sandy rushes down the platform to... (full context)
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Sandy, Herman, and Alvin load Alvin’s luggage into the car while Philip and Bess take the bus home—there is no room in the car for them. Bess,... (full context)
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...night covered in sweat due to a terrible nightmare. When Alvin turns on the light, Philip sees his stump for the first time. Philip asks how long it will take for... (full context)
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The next day, when Philip returns home, Alvin is at the dentist and Sandy is out with Aunt Evelyn. Home... (full context)
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While Philip is in the cellar, he hears the pained cough of his family’s downstairs neighbor, Mr.... (full context)
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Within a week, Philip overcomes his squeamishness and begins helping Alvin change his bandages with ease. Soon, Alvin’s stump... (full context)
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...German troops threw a grenade at Alvin, and the blast ruined his leg beyond saving. Philip is disappointed by the cowardice he perceives in Alvin’s story. (full context)
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...gets in bed, and refuses to talk to anyone for the rest of the day. Philip goes down to the cellar to cry.  (full context)
Chapter 5: Never Before
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Philip tells the story of how Alvin came to “have it in” for Sandy. One morning,... (full context)
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...Rabbi Bengelsdorf—the man who is about to become an uncle by marriage to Sandy and Philip(full context)
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Alvin is rarely home anymore—Philip misses Alvin and realizes that he had begun to use Alvin as a kind of... (full context)
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One March afternoon, Philip wanders to the abandoned street near the school playground where Alvin often shoots craps with... (full context)
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Months ago, Alvin taught Philip how to shoot craps one night after everyone else in the house had gone to... (full context)
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Philip walks home alone, leaving Alvin with his friends. He stops to pet the horses, wishing... (full context)
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As Philip rounds the corner onto his street, a man in a suit sidles up beside him... (full context)
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The agent continues pressing Philip, asking if the boys mentioned Hitler or called anyone “fascist.” Philip becomes afraid that the... (full context)
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As Philip arrives at the house, he sees three police cars and an ambulance parked out front.... (full context)
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Philip is shocked when, moments later, Bess emerges from the Wishnows’—Philip fears for a moment that... (full context)
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There is, however, plenty to be afraid of. Philip learns that the FBI agent who questioned him has also stopped by his mother’s work... (full context)
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The following Sunday, Philip wakes up alone in his room. He can hear Alvin and Uncle Monty talking in... (full context)
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...happenings—Herman goes about once a week to see a show and often brings Sandy and Philip along, as Shepsie lets the boys in for free. Philip, now nine, loves these outings... (full context)
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Philip, influenced by something Alvin said before leaving home, has come to see Sandy, Aunt Evelyn,... (full context)
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When Bess does not return, Herman, Sandy, and Philip—none of whom have uttered a word to one another for over an hour—go out looking... (full context)
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...in the car to pick Bess up. When he brings her home, she comes into Philip and Sandy’s room and sits on the edge of Philip’s bed. She can tell he... (full context)
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The next morning, Philip and Sandy are surprised when they go into the kitchen for breakfast and find that... (full context)
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...out and strikes Sandy across the face. It is the first time either Sandy or Philip has ever been hit. Sandy turns to his mother and tells her that he is... (full context)
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Philip is unsettled by Sandy’s behavior. He begins to worry that Sandy will soon run away... (full context)
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The next day, after school, Philip goes to the Newsreel Theater instead of heading home, desperate to see the footage of... (full context)
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When the show is over, an attendant pulls Philip from his seat and brings him up to the projection booth where Shepsie is waiting,... (full context)
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Philip asks why Shepsie is going to Canada. Shepsie replies simply that he has secured a... (full context)
Chapter 6: Their Country
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When Herman tells Sandy, Philip, and Bess the news, Bess becomes panicked. She knows that in the town of Danville,... (full context)
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...Sandy, though, is delighted about the move—Danville is just 14 miles from the Mawhinneys’ farm. Philip is frightened—he knows that Herman sealed their family’s fate the second he ordered Aunt Evelyn... (full context)
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...by Alvin, disappointed in Sandy, and frightened by his father’s impotence and his mother’s panic, Philip feels he is the only one who can protect his family. (full context)
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The next day after school, Philip gets on the downtown bus and goes to Aunt Evelyn’s office. Philip heads inside and... (full context)
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Philip spots a signed picture of the President and Mrs. Lindbergh together in the Oval Office,... (full context)
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Aunt Evelyn’s demeanor changes sharply. She asks Philip who has sent him to see her, and he tells her that no one has.... (full context)
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Evelyn reaches into her desk and comes around to where Philip is sitting. Philip senses a manic expression on Evelyn’s face as she tells him to... (full context)
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...host a small group of concerned Jewish MetLife agents and their wives. Mrs. Wishnow drops Philip, Sandy, and Seldon off at a movie theater in the next town over. The group... (full context)
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Sitting in the movie with Seldon, Philip dreads the move to Kentucky even more intensely—he knows that Seldon will likely be his... (full context)
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...happening from Mrs. Wishnow but who is clueless as to what’s going on, suggests that Philip give Seldon some clothes to replace the ones he’s mysteriously lost. Philip tells his mother... (full context)
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When Philip, Sandy, and Seldon return home from the movies, they enjoy leftover deli sandwiches from the... (full context)
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...country—Bess, however, retorted that the country now belongs to Lindbergh and the goyim. Sandy told Philip, alone in their room that night, that their parents are “paranoid ghetto Jews.” (full context)
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As Winchell comes on the radio the night of the adults’ meeting, Philip gets into bed. He doesn’t want to hear any more of the anxious talk. The... (full context)
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As an advertisement comes on, Philip hears Sandy begin screaming at the radio, calling Winchell a liar and excoriating Herman for... (full context)
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...want to discuss the Winchell broadcast. Having overheard their calls—and Herman and Bess’s private debriefing afterward—Philip makes what he feels is a sound, even-headed decision. He wants to run away from... (full context)
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Philip wakes up the next morning in the nearby Beth Israel Hospital—his parents are standing over... (full context)
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Philip is devastated and ashamed—but even worse than the shame of being discovered is the pain... (full context)
Chapter 7: The Winchell Riots
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After Philip gets home from the hospital, he realizes that something significant has changed nearly overnight: his... (full context)
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Philip is shocked by Herman’s transformation—but also by Sandy’s less obvious one. Sandy, who was so... (full context)
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Philip’s trip to the hospital doesn’t make the waves in the neighborhood it normally would have—just... (full context)
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Over the summer, Bess keeps a closer eye than usual on Sandy and Philip, insisting they check in at home twice a day and refrain from going out after... (full context)
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...the local MetLife families, Herman takes everybody out for ice cream. Bess cries silently as Philip and Sandy eat their sundaes. Suddenly, she exclaims that Lindbergh is teaching them a lesson... (full context)
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On the day Seldon and Mrs. Wishnow leave, Philip is shocked by his sadness and pain as they go. He cannot stop crying as... (full context)
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...is happening across the country—and whether any of it is indeed Winchell’s fault—soon arrive in Philip’s own neighborhood, and children and adults alike debate whether Winchell, in exposing anti-Semitism, is doing... (full context)
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On Monday, October 5th of 1942, Philip is home alone listening to the World Series on the radio when the program is... (full context)
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Bess, panicked, has Philip bring out his large folding map of North America. He opens it up, and Bess... (full context)
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Philip asks Seldon if he knows that Walter Winchell is dead. Seldon asks if Walter Winchell... (full context)
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Just days before Winchell’s death, Philip writes, the homes of empty “homesteaders of 1942” were filled with Italian families under the... (full context)
Chapter 8: Bad Days
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...dinner, Alvin tells the Roths all about his new life, employing an extensive and, to Philip, highly impressive lexicon of slang. Everyone else remains mostly silent. Minna is shy, while the... (full context)
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...Herman for all they’d done for him over the years and “make peace,” it is, Philip notes, hardly an ideal time for such a visit, given the tensions exploding all over... (full context)
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...Alvin clash horribly, beating each other bloody in the very middle of the dining room. Philip cannot help but think about the unprecedented fight in the context of the violence and... (full context)
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...has been wrong all along—he wants to talk to Shepsie about emigration to Canada. As Philip and Sandy head from home for school, the exhausted Philip weeps the whole way—he feels... (full context)
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The most unbelievable (but not least convincing) story Philip hears about the truth of Lindbergh’s disappearance comes from Aunt Evelyn in the days following... (full context)
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...Bengelsdorf’s arrest, Evelyn arrives at the house and conveys the above story to Bess and Philip. Just after the war, Bengelsdorf publishes it as a tell-all—My Life Under Lindbergh. Philip wonders... (full context)
Chapter 9: Perpetual Fear
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...assures him something ordinary must have come up. Seldon, however, insists he has been orphaned. Philip reveals that Seldon would later turn out to be right—Mrs. Wishnow has been killed in... (full context)
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...the refrigerator, and tell her what’s inside. He does so—there is not much to eat. Philip, Sandy, and Herman have gathered in the kitchen—Bess asks Sandy how far the Mawhinneys are... (full context)
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...Danville. The Mawhinneys agree to go to Danville, pick Seldon up, and bring him home. Philip is amazed by his mother’s quickness and efficiency in the face of such terror and... (full context)
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All Philip can think of that night—and in the days to follow, as Herman and Sandy drive... (full context)
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...were looted. While Bess goes out to a meeting, Joey Cucuzza comes upstairs to keep Philip company. That evening, as mounted police forces clip-clop up and down the streets, Philip is... (full context)
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Joey wants Philip to play with his hearing aid. Philip puts it on but worries that he’ll go... (full context)
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Joey tells Philip about a Jewish orphan runaway who drank the blood of one of the horses on... (full context)
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As Philip descends the stairs to the cellar to retrieve his suitcase, he finds himself fearing that... (full context)
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Philip brings Aunt Evelyn upstairs, where he fixes her some milk and bread. Evelyn eats hungrily... (full context)
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Bess returns home, anxious to hear from Philip whether Herman or Sandy has called to say they’ve gotten safely to Kentucky. She’s upset... (full context)
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Feeling that the only thing he can control is helping Evelyn, Philip fetches a bedpan from the bathroom to bring into the cellar for her—but his mother... (full context)
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...Newark, Herman is ill with pneumonia and must be hospitalized. In spite of it all, Philip knows there is nothing that could have stopped his father from rescuing Seldon—Herman is a... (full context)
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...to “Jewish libertines” in the South to stay away from Gentile women. The Frank case, Philip surmises, is only one small part of the long, brutal history which made Herman and... (full context)
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...Roths. Sandy moves into the front room and Seldon takes over the bed next to Philip’s, the one previously occupied by Alvin and Aunt Evelyn. This time, there is no stump... (full context)