Stalin's Wartime Correspondence with Churchill and Roosevelt
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Köp båda 2 för 432 krIlluminating and insightful. . . . An indispensable resource. Jonathan W. Jordan, Wall Street Journal "This is a masterful work of history. It should be read by anyone who wants to understand how the world we live in was shaped not only by the whole sequence of events of 1941-45, but also by the thoughts and feelings of just three extraordinary individuals." Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph Fresh and valuable insights into the way Stalin drafted and edited his messages. Tony Barber, Financial Times (Books of the Year 2018) David Reynolds and Vladimir Pechatnov have done a superbly scholarly job in documenting the relationships Stalin had with Churchill and with Franklin Roosevelt through their epistolary contact. Simon Heffer, The Daily Telegraph Two eminent scholars have produced a fascinating and detailed narrative of the wars decision-making that embeds the leaders correspondence and memoirs into other archival material. Jonathan Steele, The Guardian This remarkable book collects the wartime correspondence Churchill and Roosevelt received from Stalin more than 600 letters. Anyone wishing to understand how the Allied powers brought about Hitlers defeat must read it Daily Telegraph This is a big book in every sense of the word [. . .] Highly recommended Peter Howson, Methodist Recorder It is welcome that this book has been produced. The authoritative version of the message texts makes a significant contribution to the scholarship of the period Max Hastings, London Review of Books The Kremlin Letters is a remarkable book, one that is not only informative, but also a pleasure to read, thanks in large part to the ongoing narrative that the editors and authors provide. David B Woolner, Irish Times David Reynolds and Vladimir Pechatnov have rendered an outstanding service and annotating the letters with a keen critical eye and a lucid grasp of the historical issues surrounding their writing and reception Richard Overy, Literary Review The book [. . .] constitutes a publication in full of the major part of the StalinChurchillRoosevelt correspondence from 1941 to 1945, showing alterations in successive drafts and accompanied by a detailed running commentary drawing on multi-archival research Sheila Fitzpatrick, Australian Book Review The Kremlin Letters is an invaluable addition to the history of the Second World War and the origins of the Cold War. Margaret MacMillan, Times Literary Supplement It would not be too far a stretch to claim that the messages between Stalin and his British and US counterparts are perhaps the most important correspondences in modern history. This incredible insight into this critical channel of communication was always going to be fascinating, but is remarkably riveting too.John Ash, Britain at War [An] important contribution to understanding the Soviet point of view during World War TwoMichael Jabara Carley, Slavonic & East European Review Winner of the 2020 Link-Kuehl Prize, sponsored by the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations "A must-have volume for anyone seeking to elucidate the interplay between Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt between 1941 and 1945. The meticulous research of Professor David Reynolds and Professor Vladimir Pechatnov is a unique Anglo-Russian collaboration based on archival material in Russia, the UK and the USA. But this book offers not just the raw material of the key missives between the three leaders. It also provides a detailed commentary explaining the often constrained language of diplomacy and sets it within the context of what was happening at the time. It presents an Anglophone audience with a compelling and comprehensive account of the triangular network of exchanges at the top level which helped shape this vital period of the Second World War.Bridget Kendall The fascinating wart
David Reynolds is professor of international history at Cambridge University and the author of eleven books. Vladimir Pechatnov, a prolific scholar of the Cold War, is chair of European and American studies, Moscow State Institute of International Relations.