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Intervene or isolate? America’s role abroad has long been contested.

In April 1941, aviator Charles Lindbergh headlined a rally in New York City for the America First Committee, a group opposed to American involvement in World War II. Lindbergh’s historic 1927 solo, nonstop flight from New York to Paris had made him a celebrity; convinced that President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s policies were inching the United States toward war, he had recently become America First’s most high-profile spokesperson. 

The aviator addressed a crowd topping 10,000, while outside the venue, thousands of supporters and protesters lined the streets.

Two new books focus on the fierce debate at the time over whether the United States should enter the war – a debate that raged until Japan’s devastating attack on Pearl Harbor settled the question. Both books – Paul M. Sparrow’s “Awakening the Spirit of America: FDR’s War of Words With Charles Lindbergh – and the Battle To Save Democracy” and H.W. Brands’ “America First: Roosevelt vs. Lindbergh in the Shadow of War” – use isolationist Lindbergh and interventionist Roosevelt to explore the clashing positions over America’s role.

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