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Comrades and Commissars
The Lincoln Battalion in the Spanish Civil War

By Cecil D. Eby

544 pages | 22 illustrations/4 maps | 6.125 x 9.25 | 2006

ISBN 978-0-271-02910-8 | cloth: $39.95 tr

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In the summer of 1936, Generalissimo Francisco Franco led a group of right-wing nationalists in a military attack on the Republican government of Spain—the start of what would become the Spanish Civil War. Despite U.S. laws banning participation in foreign conflicts, American volunteers began pouring into Barcelona in January 1937. The most famous of these anti-Franco groups was the band of 2,800 American fighters who called themselves the Abraham Lincoln Battalion. In Comrades and Commissars, Cecil D. Eby pushes beyond the bias that has dominated study of the Lincoln Battalion and gets to the very heart of the American experience in Spain.

Controversy has plagued the Lincoln Battalion from the very start. Were these men selfless defenders of liberty or un-American Communists? Eby has long been regarded as one of the few balanced interpreters of their history. His 1969 book, Between the Bullet and the Lie, won accolades for its rigorous and fair treatment of the Battalion. Comrades and Commissars builds upon that earlier study, incorporating a wealth of information collected over intervening decades. New oral histories, previously untranslated memoirs, and newly declassified official documents all lend even greater authority and perspective to Eby's account. Most significant is Eby's use of Lincoln Battalion archives sequestered in a Moscow storeroom for sixty years. These papers draw renewed focus on some of the most provocative questions surrounding the Battalion, including the extent to which Americans were persecuted—and even executed—by the brigade commissariat.

The Americans who served in the Lincoln Battalion were neither mythic figures nor political abstractions. Poorly trained and equipped, they committed themselves to backto- the-wall defense of the doomed Spanish Republic. In Comrades and Commissars, we at last have the authoritative account of their experiences.


Cecil D. Eby is a retired Professor of English at the University of Michigan. He is the author of eight books, including Hungary at War: Civilians and Soldiers in World War II (Penn State Press, 1998)


Preface
1      Getting There
2      Men of La Mancha
3      The Yanks Are Coming
4      The Jarama Massacre
5      Waiting . . . Waiting
6      Tourists and Trippers
7      The Torrents of Spring
8      The Washington Battalion
9      Stalemate at Brunete
10    The Road to Zaragoza
11    Fuentes de Ebro
12    Teruel—The Big Chill
13    Retreat from Belchite
14    The Rout at Gandesa
15    Postmortem
16    In the Penal Colonies
17    The Far Shore
18    La Despedida
19    “Premature Anti-Fascists” and All That
        Appendix 1: Bibliographical Essay—Basic Sources
        Appendix 2: Interview Subjects from the XVth Brigade
        Notes
        Bibliography
        Index