- Published: 29 September 2015
- ISBN: 9781846148170
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 1008
Kissinger
1923-1968: The Idealist
- Published: 29 September 2015
- ISBN: 9781846148170
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 1008
The first volume of Ferguson's life of Kissinger is a great work about a great man by - it has to be admitted - a great historian. It should be read, and enjoyed, by every serious student of the history of our times
The Spectator
If Kissinger's official biographer cannot be accused of falling for his subject's justifiably famed charm, he certainly gives the reader enough evidence to conclude that Henry Kissinger is one of the greatest Americans in the history of the Republic, someone who has been repulsively traduced over several decades and who deserved to have defense of this comprehensiveness published years ago....Niall Ferguson already has many important, scholarly and controversial books to his credit. But if the second volume of "Kissinger" is anywhere near as comprehensive, well written and riveting as the first, this will be his masterpiece
Andrew Roberts, New York Times
Niall Ferguson...has chosen to tackle this topic on the grandest possible scale...I acquired valuable knowledge, elegantly conveyed
Paul Johnson, Standpoint Magazine
The book illustrates just what an extraordinary human being Kissinger is
Robert Service, Daily Telegraph
Like Mr Kissinger or loathe him, this is a work of engrossing scholarship
The Economist
this is a superb history of the modern world as well as a biography of Kissinger... Ferguson's tour de force shows that because Kissinger was a refugee from horror he understood from the day he first saw the Statue of Liberty that US engagement is vital to the peaceful development of the world
William Shawcross, The Times
Ferguson is undoubtedly persuasive in presenting the young Kissinger as a man of ideals as well as ideas. His advantage as the authorised biographer, deployed with full force, has been access to a vast mass of previously unseen private correspondence that reveals his subject as nothing like the calucating cold fish of legend
Marcus Tanner, Independent
With his usual meticulous research, Ferguson is master of all his work surveys. At least as important, he writes in an unobtrusive but compelling style that carries the reader along with unforced ease. Even on its own, the first volume of Ferguson's life of Kissinger is a great work about a great man by - it has to be admitted - a great historian. It should be read, and enjoyed, by every serious student of the history of our times
Sherard Cowper-Coles, Spectator
For big, bold and compelling, it is impossible to ignore Kissinger - 1923-1968: the idealist (Allen Lane), the first volume of Niall Ferguson's biography of Henry Kissinger, which asks us to reconsider America's best-known "realist" as more Kantian than Machiavellian, more Castlereagh than Meternich, at least up to 1968, when President Nixon first granted the Harvard academic high office.
John Bew, New Statesman
Some might question whether Ferguson really needs 1000 pages to tell half of Kissinger's life. Other will revel in the wealth of detail on this most controversial of American statesman
Bee Wilson, Sunday Times
a formidably detailed, closely argued study of the making of one of the giants of 20th-century foreign policy
Gideon Rachman