
Roosevelt and Stalin
Portrait of a Partnership
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

January 5, 2015
Butler, editor of My Dear Mr. Stalin, a collection of correspondences between F.D.R. and Stalin, focuses on the complex negotiations that F.D.R. orchestrated in order to create a version of Woodrow Wilson’s failed League of Nations, in this illuminating and exhaustive book. F.D.R. had been developing a proposal for the United Nations as early as 1939, but in order to succeed where Wilson failed, he understood that he needed the cooperation of the world’s other rising power: Russia. Earning Stalin’s trust required F.D.R. to carefully manage the wartime alliance among America, the U.S.S.R., and Great Britain, a three-way relationship rife with tension and distrust thanks to the antipathy between Churchill and Stalin. What’s most surprising in Butler’s narrative is the warmth that blossomed between Stalin and Roosevelt: a partnership born out of strategic necessity, which transformed into a mutual respect instrumental in winning the war and establishing the United Nations. Despite unnecessary minutiae, Butler effectively demonstrates that there was no greater mediator and champion of peace than Roosevelt, whose sudden death in the final months WWII robbed the world of perhaps the man who could have averted the Cold War.

February 1, 2015
As a follow-up to her compilation of the correspondence between Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) and Joseph Stalin (1878-1953), freelance writer Butler (My Dear Mr. Stalin) has produced a highly readable portrait of the former U.S. president and the Soviet leader's relationship. This is a critical partnership, as it not only worked to end World War II, it also set the stage for both the creation of the UN and the Cold War that followed. Beginning with Roosevelt setting off for the Tehran conference, which was the first face-to-face meeting of the two politicians, and ending with the almost total collapse of the U.S.-Russian alliance under President Harry S. Truman, Butler's volume examines a critical period of American foreign policy and history. The author has made extensive use of the resources she developed working on her previous volume and has established many more in the intervening years. The book's only weakness, if it is one, is that Butler's journalistic style may seem out of place to many academics, who might otherwise take advantage of this title. VERDICT A solid supplemental book for serious researchers in World War II diplomacy and history and an accessible work for recreational readers in the same area. [See Prepub Alert, 9/14/14.]--John Sandstrom, New Mexico State Univ. Lib., Las Cruces
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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