American History Tellers The Cold W..., Audra J. Wolfe
American History Tellers The Cold W..., Audra J. Wolfe
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American History Tellers: “The Cold War” and “Prohibition”

Author: Audra J. Wolfe, Christine Sismondo

Narrator: Lindsay Graham

Unabridged: 7 hr 3 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Wondery, Inc

Published: 05/01/2018


Synopsis

Every part of your life—the words you speak, the ideas you share—can be traced to our history, but how well do you really know the stories that made America? We’ll take you to the events, the times, and the people that shaped our nation. First, we travel back to the story that loomed over twentieth-century America more than any other: the Cold War. How do you fight a war with just ideas? Then, we’ll go back a little further, to the only time a constitutional amendment has been repealed: Prohibition. By outlawing alcohol, America saw a rise in crime, sin, vice, and, ironically, alcohol consumption.

About Audra J. Wolfe

Audra Wolfe is a writer, editor, and historian based in Philadelphia. She is trained as both a scientist and a historian of science and received her doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania. Her award-winning first book was Competing with the Soviets.

About Christine Sismondo

Christine Sismondo is a writer and lecturer in humanities at York University in Toronto. She has written numerous articles about film, literature, drinking, and vice, as well as the book Mondo Cocktail, a narrative history of cocktails.

About Lindsay Graham

Lindsay Graham is the host, editor, sound designer, and composer for the podcast American History Tellers from Wondery.


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Quotes

“Those looking for a primer on the history of Cold War science and technology in the United States need look no further…As engaging as it is informative.” Joy Rohde, assistant professor of public policy at the University of Michigan, on Competing with the Soviets by Audre Wolfe

“A robust homage to the history and proliferation of bars and their vast and often overlooked cultural significance.” Kirkus Reviews on America Walks into a Bar by Christine Sismondo