I Married a Communist is a Philip Roth novel concerning the rise and fall of Ira Ringold, known as "Iron Rinn". The story is narrated by Nathan Zuckerman, and is one of a trio of Zuckerman novels Roth wrote in the 1990s depicting the postwar history of Newark, New Jersey, and its residents.
Ira and his brother Murray serve as two immense influences on the school-age Zuckerman, and the story is told as a contemporary reminiscence between Murray and Nathan on Ira's life. Although a communist, Ira became a star in radio theater. Personal conflicts with McCarthyite politicians, a gossip columnist, and his daughter-addled and manipulative wife all combine to destroy Ira and many of those around him.
Plot
The novel is narrated by Nathan Zuckerman, who, now living in seclusion in the Berkshires, spends several evenings in conversation with his former high‑school teacher, Murray Ringold. Their discussions centre on Murray’s younger brother, Ira Ringold, a towering, volatile figure who played a formative role in Zuckerman’s youth. Through Murray’s recollections and Zuckerman’s own memories, the novel reconstructs Ira’s life from his working‑class upbringing in New Jersey to his rise and fall during the early years of the Cold War.
Ira grows up in a poor Jewish family in an Italian American neighbourhood, developing a fierce temperament that contrasts with Murray’s more studious disposition. After a series of manual jobs and service in the Second World War, Ira becomes devoted to the labour organiser Johnny O’Day, whose hard‑line left‑wing politics shape his worldview. Ira eventually finds work as a radio actor, adopting the stage name “Iron Rinn,” and becomes a prominent performer on a popular serial drama.
Claire Bloom controversy
Some reviewers, especially those in the British press such as Rachelle Thackray of The Independent and Linda Grant of The Guardian, consider the character of Eve Frame — the antisemitic wife who destroys Ira — to be a barely disguised riposte to Roth's ex-wife, Claire Bloom, for her unflattering memoirs, which portrayed Roth as unable to bottle his vanity and incapable of living in the same household with Bloom's daughter, Anna Steiger.
Linda Grant writes of the similarities between Claire Bloom and Eve Frame:
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Frame is a Jewish actress, so is Bloom. Frame's second husband is a financier, so was Bloom's. Eve Frame has a daughter who is a harpist, Bloom's girl is an opera singer. Ira tells the daughter to move out, Roth did the same. Ira has an affair with the daughter's best friend; Roth, Bloom alleged, came on to her own daughter's best friend.
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She argues I Married a Communist "is not a novel", but rather, "an angry, bitter, resentful mess by a man who might have taken another course."
