The Cold War

Understanding the global struggle that defined half a century.

 


 

Berlin 1961

By Frederick Kempe

 

The tension was palpable: American and Soviet troops stood ready to engage in the German capital. A young President Kennedy, the Bay of Pigs debacle still fresh in his mind, dared a beleaguered Khrushchev to blink. These were the perilous days of Berlin in 1961, when the world was poised on the brink of nuclear war. Kempe, a former Wall Street Journal Berlin bureau chief, paints nuanced portraits of both leaders, chronicles the events that led to the construction of the Berlin Wall, and comes to some surprising conclusions about who won this early Cold War skirmish.

 


 

Yalta: The Price of Peace

By S. M. Plokhy

 

In a resort town on the Black Sea in 1944, FDR, Churchill, and Stalin partitioned the globe and sowed the seeds of global struggle for decades to come. With the help of newly declassified Soviet documents, Harvard historian S. M. Plokhy examines the questions that continue to reverberate today: Did FDR give away too much? Did Churchill realize he was laying the foundation for a bipolar world where England was an afterthought? Most of all, did these three leaders realize how important the eight days they spent together would prove?

 


 

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold

By John le Carré

 

Le Carré's seminal work, hailed for its authenticity, dispenses with the glamor of James Bond and delivers a spy novel taut and troubling with its moral ambiguities and myriad betrayals. At the center is Alec Leamas, a stalwart servant of British intelligence who must sacrifice everything he holds dear and venture back into the East to discredit his Soviet counterpart. But is he a pawn in larger plans beyond his comprehension? Notable for one of the most devastating final scenes you'll ever read, as the balance of Leamas's fate teeters, literally, atop the Berlin Wall.

 


 

Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis

By Robert F. Kennedy

 

The Cuban Missile Crisis is understood as the height of Cold War hostility. Placing missiles less than 100 miles from US shores, the Soviet Union upped the ante in the competition to gain an edge in the nuclear arms race, with a move that threatened to upend the delicate balance between the two nations' rocket arsenals. America's only recourse was diplomacy of an unprecedented intensity. Here RFK offers a gripping first-person account of America's behind-the-scenes negotiations that somehow averted catastrophe.

 


 

Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe, 1944-1956

By Anne Applebaum

 

In the long-awaited follow-up to her Pulitzer Prize-winning Gulag, acclaimed journalist Anne Applebaum delivers a groundbreaking history of how Communism took over Eastern Europe after World War II and transformed in frightening fashion the individuals who came under its sway.

May 21: The musical smash hit Gypsy opened on Broadway on this day in 1959. The bestseller upon which the show is based, Gypsy Rose Lee's memoir Gypsy, told her life as a rags-to-naked success story, and added to…

Ethan Rutherford and Matt Burgess (Dogfight: A Love Story) on the writing of Rutherford's surreal and fiercely funny story collection The Peripatetic Coffin

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Books, CDs, DVDs to know about now
Story of My People

Recounting the struggles and eventual dissolution of a family textile business in Prato, Italy, Story of My People is a heartbreaking memoir about the personal impact of globalization.

My Struggle, Book Two

A controversial sensation in Norway, A Man in Love is the second book of six in the series, detailing Knausgaard’s separation from his wife, his move to Stolkholm and the dogged pursuit of a mesmerizing poet.

Minotaur

This newly reissued Cold War classic profiles an Israeli spy obsessed with an English girl half his age, and his attempts to win her love without ever revealing his true identity.