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6 eur + portes de 1.80 eur (livro de 430 gramas, 1.30 eur envio editorial + .50 envelope almofadado)
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Rodric Braithwaite – Moscow 1941: A City and Its People at War - Profile Books, London, 2007, 2ª edição, revised, 2ª reimpressão, 446 páginas
Em língua Inglesa.
Paperback
Livro em muito bom estado, como novo, sem sublinhados, notas ou assinaturas de posse.
Ilustrado
**
Review da Publisher's weekly:
In 1941, Moscow was ruled by Stalin and besieged by Hitler's armies, so it teemed with disagreeable characters, tragic events and a great deal of unrewarded heroism.
Although the siege was a miserable experience for Muscovites, readers will enjoy reading about it.
Braithwaite (Russia in Europe ) was British ambassador from 1988 to 1992, so he clearly knows Russia.
Early 1941 was a modestly hopeful time: a short-llived decrease in arrests after the massive purges of the '30s coincided with an increase in food in the stores.
The official press had lavished praise on the 1939 Nazi-Soviet Friendship Pact, but by spring 1941 many Soviet leaders had seen enough evidence to convince them of an imminent German invasion.
But the paranoid Stalin suspected an Allied plot to take the pressure off Britain, so Hitler's June 22 attack devastated Russia's unprepared troops.
By autumn, Wermacht armies were threatening the capital, leading to the greatest battle in history, with more than 900,000 Russian deaths—more than all WWII British and American casualties combined.
Most accounts emphasize the fighting, but Braithwaite mixes interviews, diaries, memoirs and letters to portray the reactions of dozens of individuals to that catastrophic year. This is an absorbing contribution to what he considers WWII's turning point.
///
Rodric Braithwaite – Moscow 1941: A City and Its People at War - Profile Books, London, 2007, 2ª edição, revised, 2ª reimpressão, 446 páginas
Em língua Inglesa.
Paperback
Livro em muito bom estado, como novo, sem sublinhados, notas ou assinaturas de posse.
Ilustrado
**
Review da Publisher's weekly:
In 1941, Moscow was ruled by Stalin and besieged by Hitler's armies, so it teemed with disagreeable characters, tragic events and a great deal of unrewarded heroism.
Although the siege was a miserable experience for Muscovites, readers will enjoy reading about it.
Braithwaite (Russia in Europe ) was British ambassador from 1988 to 1992, so he clearly knows Russia.
Early 1941 was a modestly hopeful time: a short-llived decrease in arrests after the massive purges of the '30s coincided with an increase in food in the stores.
The official press had lavished praise on the 1939 Nazi-Soviet Friendship Pact, but by spring 1941 many Soviet leaders had seen enough evidence to convince them of an imminent German invasion.
But the paranoid Stalin suspected an Allied plot to take the pressure off Britain, so Hitler's June 22 attack devastated Russia's unprepared troops.
By autumn, Wermacht armies were threatening the capital, leading to the greatest battle in history, with more than 900,000 Russian deaths—more than all WWII British and American casualties combined.
Most accounts emphasize the fighting, but Braithwaite mixes interviews, diaries, memoirs and letters to portray the reactions of dozens of individuals to that catastrophic year. This is an absorbing contribution to what he considers WWII's turning point.
ID: 653891123
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Publicado 20 de abril de 2024
Rodric Braithwaite – Moscow 1941: A City and Its People at War
6 €
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