Lexington Books
Pages: 530
Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-0-7391-4304-9 • Hardback • December 2009 • $192.00 • (£148.00)
978-0-7391-4305-6 • Paperback • December 2010 • $76.99 • (£59.00)
978-0-7391-4306-3 • eBook • December 2009 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
GYnter Bischof is Marshall Plan Professor of History and Director of Center Austria at the University of New Orleans. Stefan Karner is professor of social, economic, and business history at the University of Graz. He is also the director of the Ludwig Boltzmann-Institute for Research on War Consequences in Graz and Vienna, Austria. Peter Ruggenthaler is a researcher at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Research on War Consequences in Graz, Austria.
The detail of negotiation in the ideological Cold War context is fascinating in these universally well-written/translated essays. Indispensable for any library with even a bare-bones Cold War recollection.... Essential.
— Choice Reviews, July 2010
Of the many books that have been trying to look at the 1968 Czechoslovak crisis from different perspectives, this is the first one to do so in a balanced way while using substantive new evidence as well.
— Vojtech Mastny, author of The Cold War and Soviet Insecurity: The Stalin Years
It is at the moment the best collection of international scholarship on Czechoslovakia and the outside powers, which reacted to the unusual phenomenon that blossomed under the name of Prague Spring in that country for several months in 1968. The volume has an elaborate structure as a result, in part, of its complicated creation.
— Austrian History Yearbook
Short but elegant.
— Canadian Slavonic Papers