Review:
'A stunning feat of research and narrative. Terrifying.' Author: John le Carré
'Authoritative and chilling ... a readable, many-tentacled account of the decades-long military standoff between the United States and the Soviet Union ... The Dead Hand is deadly serious, but this story can verge on pitch-black comedy - Dr. Strangelove as updated by the Coen Brothers.' Author: New York Times
''The Dead Hand' is a brilliant work of history, a richly detailed, gripping tale that takes us inside the Cold War arms race as no other book has...a story so riveting and scary that you feel like you are reading a fictional thriller.' Author: Rajiv Chandrasekaran, author of 'Imperial Life in the Emerald City'
'An extraordinary achievement.' Author: Sir Michael Dobbs
'This is a tour de force of investigative history.' Author: Steve Coll
'A thought-provoking book which reads like a thriller. A gripping chronicle of the second half of the last century and a brilliant analysis of the single strategic conflict that more than any other shaped today’s world.' Author: Gordon Thomas, author of 'Inside British Intelligence and Gideon’s Spies'
'I found 'The Dead Hand' extremely stimulating. As a Foreign Office Minister I was involved in Gorbachev’s meeting with Margaret Thatcher; and as Defence Secretary from 1992-95 I was very much associated with the safe removal of post-Soviet states’ nuclear weapons. This book is an excellent history of that period.' Author: Sir Malcolm Rifkind, MP
'This book, which won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction and is soon to be published in the UK, is in the best traditions of American long-form reportage... Key characters are evoked in enough detail to make us care and then carry the narrative through to the end. It involves simplifications and elisions: but in this case, these are less important than the horrified fascination Hoffman – a former Washington Post Moscow correspondent, later foreign editor – succeeds in rousing through a story at once journalistically detailed and morally alive.' Author: John Lloyd, FT
'Hoffman's magisterial, human, vividly readable account of a remarkable time doesn't stop in 1991.' Author: Peter Preston, Guardian
'[Hoffman] has compiled a fascinating narrative of the last phase of the cold war and the era of Mikhail Gorbachev, glasnost and perestroika, which ended amid the collapse of the Soviet Union.' Author: Max Hastings, Sunday Times
From the Author:
David Hoffman is a contributing editor at the Washington Post, where he previously served as White House correspondent, Moscow bureau chief, and assistant managing editor for foreign news.
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