There are plenty of books that purport to be of History, but are political opinion and revisionist under cover. A series that comes to mind was about WWI, written about 1920 while the heat of anger concerning the Kaiser was still evident. I bought all fourteen volumes in an old bookstore. The descriptions and maps of the battles were excellent, great documentation of the chains of commands on all sides, but the series was rife with anti-German propaganda and blind patriotism for Britain and the US. A lot of it was laughable, much of it endearing in its naiveté. I kept them as a document of the times. And they looked real good on the shelf with leather bindings. And they smelled great. I eventually sold them to someone who could appreciate them for what they were: a cultural document in its own right.
Recently, I ran across a book by an American guy named John Gunther that was truly prescient for its time, Inside America (1947). Gunther had been a journalist for the Daily News London Bureau after 1925, and at various times ran the Daily News offices of London, Berlin, Vienna, Moscow, Rome, Paris, had done in depth work in Poland, Spain, the Balkans, the Middle East, and Scandinavia from 1926—1936. He came home to write his Inside series, a political-social documentation of various countries. His writing was interrupted when he became a war correspondent, Europe, and Middle East. His book, Inside the USA, is an excellent book describing an America which no longer exists, but did at one time. It is an excellent cultural history book of its time.
“For each book, Gunther traveled extensively through the area the book covered, interviewed political, social, and business leaders, talked with average people, reviewed area statistics, and then wrote a lengthy overview of what he had learned and how he interpreted it.”
“In 1947, Gunther tackled Inside U.S.A., visiting all 48 states. On the 50th anniversary of the book’s publication, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., appraised the book and its impact:
This book, now half a century old, is an astonishing tour de force. It presents a shrewd, fast-moving, sparkling panorama of the United States at this historic moment of apparent triumph. Sinclair Lewis called it “the richest treasure-house of facts about America that has ever been published, and probably the most spirited and interesting.” At the same time, in its preoccupations and insights Inside U.S.A. foresaw dilemmas and paradoxes that were to harass and frustrate Americans for the rest of the century.”
I found it in a used book store in Bimini. It’s a keeper.