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The Vanquished
The Vanquished
Sep 22, 2024 4:52 AM

Author:Robert Gerwarth

The Vanquished

'A breathtaking, magisterial panorama, telling the epic story of post-war anarchy, dying empires and rising nation states. It makes us rethink our understanding of Europe's twentieth century' David Motadel, The Times Literary Supplement

For the Western allies 11 November 1918 has always been a solemn date - the end of fighting which had destroyed a generation, and also a vindication of a terrible sacrifice with the total collapse of their principal enemies: the German Empire, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. But for much of the rest of Europe this was a day with no meaning, as a continuing, nightmarish series of conflicts engulfed country after country. In this highly original, gripping book Robert Gerwarth asks us to think again about the true legacy of the First World War.

'Lucid, incisive and packed with fascinating details' Financial Times, Books of the Year

'Important and timely ... obliges us to reconsider a period and a battlefront that has too often been neglected' Margaret MacMillan, The New York Times Review of Books

'This narrative of continent-wide chaos performs a valuable service by chronicling the postwar turmoil of Europe ... helps us understand why few wars reach tidy conclusions' Max Hastings, Sunday Times

'Reminds us, in vivid and often shocking detail, that only some countries saw killing end on the 11th day of the 11th month ... leaves a sense of foreboding for our own time' Robert Tombs, The Times

Reviews

This narrative of continent-wide chaos makes it easier to understand why order came to seem a supremely desirable objective in 1930s Europe, trumping freedom ... it helps us understand why few wars reach tidy conclusions: once a society has suspended its instinctive, social and legal prejudice against killing, it often proves hard to restore.

—— Max Hastings , The Sunday Times

Pulls together a complex narrative about the uneasy peace of the late Twenties and shine a piercing light into darkened corners of history ... an unnerving reminder of how stubbornly some geopolitical fault-lines endure

—— Sinclair McKay , The Telegraph

A mixture of fast-paced narrative and fluent analysis ... Gerwarth demonstrates with an impressive concentration of detail that in central, eastern and south-eastern Europe the carnage of the first world war by no means came to an end, as it did for the British and French, in late 1918.

—— Tony Barber , Financial Times

Combining a big-picture overview with close-up detail - we hear the voices of soldiers, politicians, civilians - Gerwarth has written a vivid if disturbing account

—— Matthew Price , National

Searing and vivid ... a timely reminder that the roots of century-long violence can be traced back to the cataclysmic end of the Great War

—— Richard Overy , Literary Review

A thorough explanation for the rise of the nationalist and fascist groups who set the stage for World War II.

—— Kirkus Reviews

Gerwarth's fascinating and finely crafted book is a rich combination of military, political, cultural and social history. He makes good use of literary sources and witness testimony to bring the events he narrates to life ... an impressive work of highly accessible scholarship

—— Geoffrey Roberts , Irish Times

This is an important and compelling book with a fascinating and chilling narrative ... Gerwarth reveals how the forgotten postwar violence comprised a key step on Europe's descent into darkness.

—— Alexander Watson , BBC History Magazine

While Gerwarth's warfare theories are cogent and convincing, he never loses sight of the human dimension. He skillfully avoids the danger of getting bogged down in a mass of detail, livening up his narrative by using contemporary quotes from politicians, soldiers and writers. One mark of a good history book is that it allows the reader to see familiar events from a new perspective. In this respect, The Vanquished is an exceptional history book.

—— Andrew Lynch , Sunday Post Business Magazine

[Gerwarth] shines a light on what is, from a western European point of view, a somewhat obscure and relatively short period of time ... from the layman's vantage point, it is so well written that it reads like a novel. Tragically, for the people killed, wounded and forced to flee from their homes, it is not. This book is well worth the read.

—— Frank MacGabhann , Irish Independent

This fine and timely study makes a compelling case for the argument that the bloody aftermath of the war did more to destroy European civilisation than the declarations of war in 1914 ... at a time when Vladimir Putin seems intent on regaining Tsarist Russia's frontiers, and the map of the Middle East drawn by the victorious powers becomes ever more blurred, we might well ask whether the First World War has ended yet.

—— A.W. Purdue , Times Higher Education Supplement

A clear and excellent account of the abrupt break-up of the Habsburg, Hohenzollern, Ottoman and Romanov empires and the difficult birth of their successor states during 1917-23

—— History of War Reviews

This is difficult, often horrifying reading, but Gerwarth provides an essential contribution to our understanding of the interwar years.

—— Jay Freeman , Booklist

Ceaselessly insightful, this masterpiece of historical inquiry - the fruit of five years' labour - dissects the impact of the war on society, politics, urban planning and much else besides

—— Sunday Telegraph

Few historians could be better placed to investigate this subject than Keith Lowe . . . riveting

—— Evening Standard

Grimly absorbing, conveys the pity of war with integrity and proper sympathy

—— Ian Thomson on 'Savage Continent' , Sunday Telegraph

Compelling, startling and gripping. The definitive account of a great tragedy

—— A.C. Grayling on 'Inferno'

A real triumph: shocking, yet sensitive and supremely fair-minded. This is a wonderful book about hellish events

—— Richard Holmes on 'Inferno'

The story of that hellish summer night is one Lowe tells well, unblinkingly, exactly as he should... a tour de force

—— Sunday Times on 'Inferno'

Moving, measured and provocative

—— Dominic Sandbrook on 'Savage Continent' , Sunday Times

Admirable, impeccably researched and engagingly written...deserves its place on the shelves

—— Daily Telegraph on 'Inferno'

Graphic and chilling. This excellent book paints a little-known and frightening picture of a continent in the embrace of lawlessness and chaos

—— Ian Kershaw on 'Savage Continent'

[Night Sky with Exit Wounds] is delicate, intimate and political.

—— Deborah Levy

Sometimes, I think of it as a song cycle; sometimes, a book of poems; sometimes, an epic. Vuong puts himself at the centre of this collection in an astonishing way, even as he is also entirely willing to set himself aside.

—— Alexander Chee , Frieze

Ocean Vuong’s Night Sky With Exit Wounds... is beguiling and sublime.

—— Diana Evans , Guardian

Vuong's voice is unique and inspires empathy.

—— Eva Waite-Taylor , Independent

Beautiful... [Night Sky With Exit Wounds] is pretty special.

—— Francesca Hayward , Observer

I loved Dadland for its tenderness, humour and candour. It has begun to open the door for me to what may well lie ahead in my life, in so many of our lives, in terms of ageing parents. And it has also taught me something deeply moving about tolerance, and about love

—— Robert Macfarlane

A wonderful, haunting and beautifully written memoir... I found myself laughing out loud at times and, at others, unable to hold back the tears... An absolutely stunning book

—— James Holland

Dadland has the weight of family love but fizzes along in accessible and dynamic prose, highly recommended

—— Andrew McMillan

A mesmerising performance by a natural storyteller gifted with the most seductive material possible, in the wild and wonderful life of her exasperating Irish father. Pain and annoyance is transmuted into pure narrative gold, as Keggie Carew interrogates the legend of this wartime adventurer and the bitter comedy of his domestic relationships and his late decline. A brave, risk-taking tale that alarms, delights and moves. As soon as you come to the end, you want to start again, to see if those things really happened

—— Iain Sinclair

You love these people from the first page ... As Tom's life falls apart memory by memory, Keggie is picking it up again and her storytelling is spell-binding. Effortlessly readable, this is a delight combining laughter - and tears, yes, quite a few of those.

—— Connexion

Compelling

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express

A moving memoir-cum-biography.

—— Molly McCloskey , Irish Times

By some margin my Book of the Month... A detective story, a family history, a thrilling tale of derring-do, and the most distinctive and affecting memoir I’ve read since H is for Hawk.

—— Bookseller

Utterly remarkable, and beautifully evoked… Dadland is a completely riveting, deeply poignant “manhunt” for which I predict great things.

—— Bookseller

Dadland, by Keggie Carew, is being tipped for award-winning breakout success in the vein of H is for Hawk

—— Jon Coates , Sunday Express

It’s an exorcism, ghost-hunt and swim through the archipelago of her father’s shattered self… The author’s descriptions have an easy lyricism.

—— Ed Cripps , Times Literary Supplement

The old question 'what did you do in the war, Dad?' has never had a more surprising or moving answer.

—— David Hepworth

Warm and funny, sometimes regretful and sad, but overall a read like a rollercoaster. Wonderful.

—— Western Morning News

You know the saying that everyone has a book in them? Well, unless your book is as good as this, I'd give up right now

—— Daily Mail , Markus Berkmann

You know the saying that everyone has a book in them? Well, unless your book is as good as this, I’d give up right now… This gripping book, written with real verve and a narrative expertise that wouldn’t shame a veteran.

—— Sally Morris , Daily Mail

A brilliant, bittersweet biography.

—— Cornelia Parker , Observer

Keggie’s writing is immersive… She writes with a warmth and generosity about her father, a man who was a genuine character and hero.

—— Paul Cheney , Nudge

Dadland is deeply personal. But it is also the story of our generations: people touched by war and by Alzheimer’s

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express
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