Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe 1944-56
M**S
Important historical facts
I enjoy reading this ladies books. She tells things as they happened with eye witness accounts. Anyone who believes the world is being to hard on Russia 🇷🇺 just read this account of history coming from people who lived it. I think we should all inform ourselves about world affairs being as we are all part of the world. History is repeating itself now in the Ukraine 🇺🇦. Just devastating to read these things happening in our time. Very well done, lots of first hand accounts and many reference points to study for your self. Would recommend this to everyone who is truly interested in what happened and what is happening now in Europe. Read and be informed from reliable sources. Again just my humble opinion. Enjoy and reflect.
A**A
Livraison rapide, ouvrage très intéressant.
L'auteur est une journaliste et non une historienne, et américaine. Il faut donc avoir en tête ces 2 facteurs en lisant l'ouvrage mais le travail est sérieux, complet et intéressant.Une vision nouvelle de l'Europe derrière le Rideau de Fer dans les années post guerre, avec des témoignages enrichissants.
D**N
A Magnificent Tour-de-Force, Full of Fascinating Detail
This magnificent book by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anne Applebaum took six years to research and write and it quickly becomes clear why this should be so. The breadth of research into many different country and language archives is quite astonishing and Applebaum acknowledges the extensive research help she received.The book is not a chronological narrative of the Communist overthrow and suppression of the Eastern Block after 1945 but rather it deals, in separate chapters, with different aspects of the Communist subversion of the democratic institutions and the supervision of all aspects of everyday life. The book confines itself to the period largely under the control of Stalin and does not deal with events running up to the collapse of 1989. Thus, the first half of the book includes chapters, amongst others, devoted to the establishment of the secret police, the role of violence, ethnic cleansing and the capture of the radio. The second half, which is aptly titled, `High Stalinism' deals with the systematic identification and elimination of supposed enemies of the state, the control of the arts and architecture and how the ordinary rank and file accommodated to these changes. Finally the German and Hungarian revolutions of 1953 and 1956 are briefly described. Applebaum chooses to deal principally with East Germany, Poland and Hungary although some references are made to the other European Communist states such as Czechoslovakia, Romania and Yugoslavia. The informed reader will be familiar with the general sweep of history contained in this book as much has already been published on this subject, but the fascination and interest of this work derives from its attention to detail and the painstaking way in which the author describes the varied aspects of the all-enveloping, suffocating, spread of Communist control into virtually every part of life in Eastern Europe. Applebaum also gives excellent character sketches of the detestable leading figures in these countries. My only quibble with the historical content is that the author describes the expulsion of ethnic Germans, and those supposed to be ethnic Germans, from Poland and Czechoslovakia as better organised, more humane, and less chaotic than the facts would suggest. Applebaum is unduly generous to the 1945 Polish government and the downright nasty interim government of Edvard Benes in Czechoslovakia. A reading of `Orderly and Humane' by R. M. Douglas, Yale, 2012, provides a good corrective to the somewhat orderly picture painted by Applebaum. I was disappointed that the book did not spend more time dealing with the privileged enclaves the leaders of these Communist regimes provided for themselves, particularly in the DDR, but perhaps that is a subject for a different book.This excellent book is very well written in a clear, lucid, style and I do not think I had to re-read a single sentence. Whilst rather weighty, it is very accessible and should appeal to all interested in this aspect of modern history.
M**R
Select view of Communist European states
The decade after the Second World War saw the Communists establish their authority in six states of Eastern Europe, those behind the so-called Iron Curtain. This book looks at how that came to be.Despite what the title says, Applebaum mainly looks at East Germany, Hungary, and Poland; while that is not a major concern, the book did sound more encompassing so that was slightly unfortunate. That said it is a good look at the political and social changes that occurred, covering a wide scope that shows how far-reaching the Communist authorities were. Every part of the people's lives were effected, which is detailed by many personal accounts throughout. However it does at times feel like it lacks a thorough analysis, and could have been more in depth and critical. That said it is an easy, quick read, and a good work to use for further information on the topic.
A**U
Two Stars
The writer doesn't allow you to understand an issue rather wants to touch and go every episode of history
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