"An impressive work which offers a useful perspective on the origins of the crisis the labor movement faces." -The Nation "[Lichtenstein's] research remains a significant contribution. for drawing attention to the critical importance of events that transpired for labor during what Eric Goldman thirty years ago labeled 'the crucial decade.'" -Walter Licht, Reviews in American History "Lichtenstein has compiled a splendid, well-researched book, written in an engaging and confident style. He effectively analyzes the search for labor stability during the war and, most important, what the implications were for trades unionism in the United States after 1945." -The Economic History Review "This book is essential reading for students of American labor." -Craig A. Zabala, Contemporary Sociology "Lichtenstein's.
interpretation of the CIO's wartime experience is always provocative and frequently compelling." -Cletus E. Daniel, The American Historical Review "[Lichtenstein's] book represents an important addition not only to labor history but to political history as well." -James R. Barrett, The Journal of Economic History "[Labor's War at Home] is grounded in a wide range of primary sources. Lichtenstein hopes to salvage from the war years a lesson for the militants of today." -Alan Clive, The Journal of American History "[M]ore than an interpretation of the labor movement in the 1940's, it is a detailed analysis of the struggle and a reminder of what happens when a radical movement is absorbed into the state." -Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law.