A fascinating and masterfully researched book. -Henry Kissinger
Lukacs' project is to restore the characters ... of individual leaders to a central role in a historical narrative ... . Urgently engrossing -- Tim Rutten, Los Angeles Times
A bantam-sized book with a heavyweight punch. Once again, Lukacs has, with great concision and intellectual force, zeroed in on a brief period but momentous episode that literally changed the world. And once again, he has managed to bring alive the protagonists and bring clarity as well as drama to their fateful interaction. -- Strobe Talbott, President, The Brookings Institution
John Lukacs' s June 1941: Hitler and Stalin is one of the fullest and most authoritative portraits of the ambiguous relationship between the two powerful and wily adversaries during World War II' s watershed year. Drawing on newly available source material from the diaries, personal papers and post-war interviews of senior staff members close to each, it is a fascinating and masterfully researched book. -- Henry Kissinger
0;Lukacs7; project is to restore the characters o0; of individual leaders to a central role in a historical narrative o0;. Urgently engrossing1;2;Tim Rutten, Los Angeles Times -- Tim Rutten Los Angeles Times
0;A bantam-sized book with a heavyweight punch. Once again, Lukacs has, with great concision and intellectual force, zeroed in on a brief period but momentous episode that literally changed the world. And once again, he has managed to bring alive the protagonists and bring clarity as well as drama to their fateful interaction.1;2;Strobe Talbott, President, The Brookings Institution
-- Strobe Talbott
John Lukacs7;s June 1941: Hitler and Stalin is one of the fullest and most authoritative portraits of the ambiguous relationship between the two powerful and wily adversaries during World War II7;s watershed year. Drawing on newly available source material from the diaries, personal papers and post-war interviews of senior staff members close to each, it is a fascinating and masterfully researched book. 2;Henry Kissinger
-- Henry Kissinger
John Lukacs''s latest work, June 1941, showcases the worldliness, strategic wisdom, and superb eye for the personal detail that has made him one of our most experienced, readable, and sophisticated historians of the WW2 era. --Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar and Potemkin: Catherine the Great''s Imperial Partner
John Lukacs''s latest work, June 1941 , showcases the worldliness, strategic wisdom, and superb eye for the personal detail that has made him one of our most experienced, readable, and sophisticated historians of the WW2 era. --Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar and Potemkin: Catherine the Great''s Imperial Partner
--Simon Sebag Montefiore
John Lukacs's latest work, June 1941 , showcases the worldliness, strategic wisdom, and superb eye for the personal detail that has made him one of our most experienced, readable, and sophisticated historians of the WW2 era. --Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar and Potemkin: Catherine the Great's Imperial Partner
--Simon Sebag Montefiore
John Lukacs's June 1941: Hitler and Stalin is one of the fullest and most authoritative portraits of the ambiguous relationship between the two powerful and wily adversaries during World War II's watershed year. Drawing on newly available source material from the diaries, personal papers and post-war interviews of senior staff members close to each, it is a fascinating and masterfully researched book. --Henry Kissinger
--Henry Kissinger
John Lukacs's latest work, June 1941, showcases the worldliness, strategic wisdom, and superb eye for the personal detail that has made him one of our most experienced, readable, and sophisticated historians of the WW2 era. --Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar and Potemkin: Catherine the Great's Imperial Partner
--Simon Sebag Montefiore
A bantam-sized book with a heavyweight punch. Once again, Lukacs has, with great concision and intellectual force, zeroed in on a brief period but momentous episode that literally changed the world. And once again, he has managed to bring alive the protagonists and bring clarity as well as drama to their fateful interaction. --Strobe Talbott, President, The Brookings Institution
--Strobe Talbott
Lukacs' project is to restore the characters ... of individual leaders to a central role in a historical narrative .... Urgently engrossing --Tim Rutten, Los Angeles Times --Tim Rutten Los Angeles Times
John Lukacs s June 1941: Hitler and Stalin is one of the fullest and most authoritative portraits of the ambiguous relationship between the two powerful and wily adversaries during World War II s watershed year. Drawing on newly available source material from the diaries, personal papers and post-war interviews of senior staff members close to each, it is a fascinating and masterfully researched book. Henry Kissinger
--Henry Kissinger
John Lukacs'slatest work, June 1941, showcases the worldliness, strategic wisdom, and superb eye for the personal detail that has made him one of our most experienced, readable, and sophisticatedhistorians of the WW2 era. Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar and Potemkin: Catherine the Great's Imperial Partner --Simon Sebag Montefiore
John Lukacs excels at making historical fulcrum moments exciting, explicable and immediate. As with his superb Five Days InLondon, he shows howimportant Adolf Hitler'sone-man decisions were to theexperiences of millions in the twentiethcentury. When the Fuhrerunleashed Blitzkrieg onthe USSR on 21 June 1941, he said that Operation Barbarossa would make the world hold its breath; you will hold yours as Lukacs' narrative unrolls. Andrew Roberts --Andrew Roberts
John Lukacs s June 1941: Hitler and Stalin is one of the fullest and most authoritative portraits of the ambiguous relationship between the two powerful and wily adversaries during World War II s watershed year. Drawing on newly available source material from the diaries, personal papers and post-war interviews of senior staff members close to each, it is a fascinating and masterfully researched book. Henry Kissinger
--Henry Kissinger
A terse and telling book which looks into a familiar turning point in history, and penetrates nearer the marrow than less able historians have done before. MRD Foot (Michael Foot) --Michael Foot
John Lukacs'slatest work, June 1941, showcases the worldliness, strategic wisdom, and superb eye for the personal detail that has made him one of our most experienced, readable, and sophisticatedhistorians of the WW2 era. Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar and Potemkin: Catherine the Great's Imperial Partner --Simon Sebag Montefiore
A bantam-sized book with a heavyweight punch.Once again, Lukacs has, with great concision and intellectual force, zeroed in on a brief period but momentous episode that literally changed the world.And once again, he has managed to bring alive the protagonists and bring clarity as well as drama to their fateful interaction. Strobe Talbott, President, The Brookings Institution
--Strobe Talbott
[Lukacs] watches as two specific people make very specific decisions that will shape the rest of the twentieth century. Benjamin Healy and Benjamin Schwarz, Atlantic Monthly --Benjamin Healy and Benjamin Schwarz Atlantic Monthly
Lukacs project is to restore the characters of individual leaders to a central role in a historical narrative . Urgently engrossing Tim Rutten, Los Angeles Times --Tim Rutten Los Angeles Times
A good introduction. . . . Lukacs captures the drama leading up to the German invasion. Charters Wynn, The Historian--Charters Wynn The Historian