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Vanished Kingdoms
Vanished Kingdoms
Oct 10, 2024 2:18 PM

Author:Norman Davies

Vanished Kingdoms

From Norman Davies, the acclaimed author of Europe: A History, comes the magical history of Europe's lost realms, selected as a Book of the Year by the Sunday Times, Daily Telegraph, New Statesman, Independent, Guardian and Financial Times.

Europe's history is littered with kingdoms, duchies, empires and republics which have now disappeared but which were once fixtures on the map of their age. What happened to the once-great Mediterranean 'Empire of Aragon'? Where did the half-forgotten kingdoms of Burgundy go? Which current nations will one day become a distant memory too? This original and enthralling book peers through the cracks of history to discover the stories of lost realms across the centuries.

'Dazzling, provocative and brilliant' Dominic Sandbrook, Sunday Times, Books of the Year

'A luminous account ... there are few better ways of understanding the multilayered splendours and horrors of Europe's past than through the pages of this wise, humane and unfailingly engaging book' John Adamson, Sunday Telegraph

'Vanished Kingdoms is great history and also great art. It is written with verve, passion and profound empathy' David Marquand, New Statesman, Books of the Year

'A magnificent achievement. Brocaded with scholarship, the book is unlikely ever to be equalled' Ian Thomson, Independent

Reviews

Iron Curtain is an exceptionally important book which effectively challenges many of the myths of the origins of the Cold War. It is wise, perceptive, remarkably objective and brilliantly researched.

—— Antony Beevor

Pulses with [Elmes’] own love of the medium ... an engaging read

—— Scotsman

Elmes’ beguiling book offers an appealing blend of history and nostalgia

—— Good Book Guide

[A] charming history of the call signs, catch-phrases, repetitions and modulations of tone that make up the world of the radio … The stories behind the voices are told with real affection for the subject

—— Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine

[A] fascinating book charting the story of the great and forgotten names of radio from today and the last nine decades

—— Full House magazine

The genius at the heart of this gripping work resembles that of a play by Schiller or Shakespeare

—— Financial Times

Well researched and lucidly written. What interests [Kempe] is not really Berlin but Washington and Moscow; we learn ... a great deal about the machinations of the two superpowers

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times

Berlin 1961 is a page-turner, written with all the vigour and verve of a spy novel, so you will have difficulty in putting it down until you have finished its 500 pages of gripping narrative

—— International Affairs

A gripping, well-researched, and thought-provoking book with many lessons for today

—— Henry Kissinger

Kempe has masterfully captured the dramatic dimensions of a great story that shaped the world order for twenty-eight years. Berlin 1961 is an important achievement

—— Chuck Hagel

An amazing drama ... Kempe's compelling narrative is a triumph of great writing and research

—— Walter Isaacson (President and CEO, The Aspen Institute)

Engaging, richly researched, thought-provoking ... combines the 'You are there' storytelling skills of a journalist, the analytical skills of the political scientist, and the historian's use of declassified U.S., Soviet, and German documents to provide unique insight into the forces and individuals behind these events

—— General Brent Scowcroft (National Security Advisor to Presidents Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush)

Kempe's compelling narrative, astute analysis, and meticulous research bring fresh insight into a crucial and perilous episode of the Cold War, bringing Kennedy and Khrushchev to life as they square off at the brink of nuclear war. His masterly telling of a scary and cautionary tale from half a century ago has the immediacy of today's headlines

—— Strobe Talbott (President, Brookings Institution)

Takes us to Ground Zero of the Cold War. Reading these pages, you feel as if you are standing at Checkpoint Charlie, amid the brutal tension of a divided Berlin

—— David Ignatius

European history comes in many guises, but Brendan Simms's strategic and geopolitical approach provides a strong and lucid framework within which everything else fits into place. His emphasis on the centrality of Germany offsets more western-orientated accounts while also giving due prominence to Eastern Europe. Covering the whole of the modern period, this book is more than an excellent introduction; it's a major interpretational achievement

—— Norman Davies

World history is German history, and German history is world history. This is the powerful case made by this gifted historian of Europe, whose expansive erudition revives the proud tradition of the history of geopolitics, and whose immanent moral sensibility reminds us that human choices made in Berlin (and London) today about the future of Europe might be decisive for the future of the world

—— Timothy Snyder (author of Bloodlands)

A tremendous feat ... Simms's pages teem with some of the greatest characters in European history

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times

Remarkably, such a large and complex book ... offers a very straightforward argument and thesis ... The more familiar the story, the more arresting is Simms's repositioning of it ... This isn't simply academic history but an account of how we came to be, albeit ambivalently and conflictedly, involved in a continental narrative that is still unfolding

—— Sunday Herald
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