Revolution's End serves as a carefully documented, shockingly significant missing link of American history.
Paul Krassner, AlterNet
Revolution's End is a stunning and chilling expose of one of the most bizarre political chapters in my lifetime the rise of the Symbionese Liberation Army and the kidnapping of bad-girl heiress Patty Hearst. Brad Schreiber presents a compelling new case that the SLA was a creation of the police state to infiltrate, subvert, and destroy the growing radical movements of the period.
David Talbot, founder of Salon.com and bestselling author of Season of the Witch and The Devil's Chessboard
Revolution's End is a gripping read a persuasive, well-researched and detailed interpretation of what is known about the SLA kidnapping of Patty Hearst.
Peter Dale Scott, author of The American Deep State: Wall Street, Big Oil, and the Attack on U.S. Democracy
This book careens to its bloody ending with all of the inevitability of a train wreck. Schreiber won't let us take our eyes off it. He ignites the past in chilling detail and at the same time shines an uncanny and unsettling light on who we are today.
T. Jefferson Parker, three-time winner of the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award
'The Symbionese Liberation Army' was a counter-revolutionary front, carefully created...to infiltrate and discredit the authentic leftist movements then alive and well in California. Such is the unhappy, fascinating truth Brad Schreiber tells in Revolution's End a careful book, and one as necessary as it is disturbing, not just for all it teaches us about what really happened with the SLA in California, over forty years ago, but also and especially for what it teaches us about America today, and all the world, post-9/11.
Mark Crispin Miller, professor of media studies, New York University and author of Loser Take All: Election Fraud and the Subversion of Democracy, 2000 2008
Really incredible... It's a fascinating book you've written. I think it's important that we study these moments in recent history so that we can have a better view on what's happening in today's world.
Tyrel Ventura, Watching the Hawks, RT America Television
The book comes across as a solidly researched, well-documented history.... It does make an interesting addition to the literature on the Hearst kidnapping, radical groups in the 1970s and the hidden corners of American history.
David Pitt, Booklist
Even more fascinating than the publicly known story of the SLA, Schreiber's text takes an extendedand serious look at a possible deep narrative regarding the genesis of the SLA...Even more so, though, is the detailed and convincing examination he provides the reader of how police agencies can and do work to destroy the political enemies of the corporate state.
Ron Jacobs, Counterpunch
Revolution's End is a careful examination of the relationships among various government intelligence, police and prison agencies that colluded to create a synthetic terror group called the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) Schreiber's exposure of government involvement in the creation of the SLA is nothing short of explosive a remarkable book.
Kara Dellacoppa, Dissident Voice
With poise . . . Schreiber connects activities in the LAPD, FBI, and CIA to prisoner programs within the California Department of Corrections, leading to then-Governor Ronald Reagan's cabinet . . . this is fruitful territory.
-M.W. Lipschultz, Los Angeles Review of Books
Multicultural Non-Fiction * Prize *
Revolution's End serves as a carefully documented, shockingly significant missing link of American history.
Paul Krassner, AlterNet
Revolution's End is a stunning and chilling expose of one of the most bizarre political chapters in my lifetime the rise of the Symbionese Liberation Army and the kidnapping of bad-girl heiress Patty Hearst. Brad Schreiber presents a compelling new case that the SLA was a creation of the police state to infiltrate, subvert, and destroy the growing radical movements of the period.
David Talbot, founder of Salon.com and bestselling author of Season of the Witch and The Devil's Chessboard
Revolution's End is a gripping read a persuasive, well-researched and detailed interpretation of what is known about the SLA kidnapping of Patty Hearst.
Peter Dale Scott, author of The American Deep State: Wall Street, Big Oil, and the Attack on U.S. Democracy
This book careens to its bloody ending with all of the inevitability of a train wreck. Schreiber won't let us take our eyes off it. He ignites the past in chilling detail and at the same time shines an uncanny and unsettling light on who we are today.
T. Jefferson Parker, three-time winner of the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award
'The Symbionese Liberation Army' was a counter-revolutionary front, carefully created...to infiltrate and discredit the authentic leftist movements then alive and well in California. Such is the unhappy, fascinating truth Brad Schreiber tells in Revolution's End a careful book, and one as necessary as it is disturbing, not just for all it teaches us about what really happened with the SLA in California, over forty years ago, but also and especially for what it teaches us about America today, and all the world, post-9/11.
Mark Crispin Miller, professor of media studies, New York University and author of Loser Take All: Election Fraud and the Subversion of Democracy, 2000 2008
Really incredible... It's a fascinating book you've written. I think it's important that we study these moments in recent history so that we can have a better view on what's happening in today's world.
Tyrel Ventura, Watching the Hawks, RT America Television
The book comes across as a solidly researched, well-documented history.... It does make an interesting addition to the literature on the Hearst kidnapping, radical groups in the 1970s and the hidden corners of American history.
David Pitt, Booklist
Even more fascinating than the publicly known story of the SLA, Schreiber's text takes an extendedand serious look at a possible deep narrative regarding the genesis of the SLA...Even more so, though, is the detailed and convincing examination he provides the reader of how police agencies can and do work to destroy the political enemies of the corporate state.
Ron Jacobs, Counterpunch
Revolution's End is a careful examination of the relationships among various government intelligence, police and prison agencies that colluded to create a synthetic terror group called the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) Schreiber's exposure of government involvement in the creation of the SLA is nothing short of explosive a remarkable book.
Kara Dellacoppa, Dissident Voice
With poise . . . Schreiber connects activities in the LAPD, FBI, and CIA to prisoner programs within the California Department of Corrections, leading to then-Governor Ronald Reagan's cabinet . . . this is fruitful territory.
-M.W. Lipschultz, Los Angeles Review of Books
Silver Award Winner for True Crime * Prize *
Silver Award Winner for True Crime * Prize *
Silver Award Winner for True Crime * Prize *