Tony Judt
POSTWAR
Is not the pastness of the past the more profound, the more legendary, the more immediately it falls before the present?
Praise for Tony Judt’s
“If anyone can bring off the impossible task that Tony Judt has set himself in
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“Massive, kaleidoscopic and thoroughly readable… [Judt’s] book becomes the definitive account of Europe’s rise from the ashes and its take-off into an uncertain future.”
“Tony Judt is one of our most dazzling public intellectuals, as thoughtful as he is knowledgeable.
“Nobody is more qualified than Judt to combine serious descriptive history with incisive, original political analysis, to cover both western and eastern Europe, and to pass stinging yet informed judgments on the behavior and evasions, the deeds and the failings, of his subjects…. This monumental work is a tour-de-force.”
“Professor Judt knows more about contemporary Europe than almost any American (or any European, for that matter). In
“An epically important subject—Europe as both the epicenter of political and ideological catastrophes in the last century and the principal laboratory for an experiment in whatever chance humanity has of a peace in the century just begun—has, to the benefit of us all, found the author it deserves. Tony Judt, long one of the wisest heads and clearest voices around, has produced a magisterial history and a solid foundation for clear thinking about the future.
“Truly superb. It is hard to imagine how a better—and more readable—history of the emergence of today’s Europe from the ashes of 1945 could ever be written.”
“Magisterial… He has written a magnificent conventional history of modern Europe, but its quality and its power come from the way he insists that his narrative is also a history of ideas and of the peculiar vulnerability of the European mind to ideologies and to the patterns of thought and political loyalty they impose.”
“As soon as you realize how good it is, this book will frighten you…. This is a work which, on almost every page, evokes to readers over the age of forty what they once felt, hoped for, took part in, or fled from. Judt has written, in great detail and at great length, the biography of a middle-aged continent trying, after a disgraceful past, to settle down and go straight.”
“Rich and immensely detailed.”
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“Tony Judt… has produced not only the heaviest history of modern Europe ever written, but probably the best…. [He] moves fluently and deftly from politics and economics to films and television, whisking the reader through West German coalition-building, past the French New Wave, and on toward the Eurovision Song Contest…. [A] magnificently rich and readable book.”
“Masterly and exhilarating… Judt has made the ‘culture wars’ between communism and anticommunism a special subject and he deals with this brilliantly once more…. Judt has a fine eye for telling detail…. This is a splendid book to which no review can do proper justice. So many subjects are adroitly dealt with.”