New and Notable


  • Allawi's "The Occupation of Iraq: Winning the War, Losing the Peace"

  • Dwyer's "Napoleon: The Path to Power"

  • Sennett's "The Craftsman"

  • Shimba's "A Photographic Guide to the Birds of Japan and North-East Asia"

  • Speth's "The Bridge at the Edge of the World"

  • Thaler and Sunstein's "Nudge"

  • Tedeschi and Dahm's "Watercolors by Winslow Homer: The Color of Light"

  • Zittrain's "The The Future of the Internet--And How to Stop It"

Israel's Independence and Churchill's Zionism

9780300116090 As Israel, and its millions of supporters world-wide, celebrate its 60th birthday, few realize the important role that Winston Churchill played in the establishment of the State of Israel and the shaping of the modern Middle East.

Michael Makovsky’s groundbreaking Churchill’s Promised Land, brings this and much more to light in his careful and nuanced examination of Churchill’s complex relationship with Zionism.

In exploring Churchill’s evolving and ultimately romantic interest in Zionism, Makovsky offers a fresh, more complete and revealing understanding of this great statesman’s worldview. 

Churchill’s Promised Land won the National Jewish Book Award for History (2007) and was a finalist for the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature (2008).

Read an excerpt, or view the table of contents. Click here to listen to an interview with Michael Makovsky on the Yale Press Podcast.

Morris's 1948 is a critics' favorite

9780300126969 Under the spotlight of the 60th anniversary of Israeli independence, Benny Morris's recent book, 1948, is a praised as a shining example.

Last Sunday’s New York Times Book Review features David Margolick's review, saying: "Morris relates the story of his new book soberly and somberly, evenhandedly and exhaustively."

The May 5th issue of The New Yorker hit newsstands on Monday with a feature piece by David Remnick. This piece on Israeli history centers around Morris and the publication of 1948, calling it "a commanding, superbly documented, and fair-minded study of the events that, in the wake of the Holocaust, gave a sovereign home to one people and dispossessed another."

Last Monday, David Holahan reviewed the book for the Hartford Courant. 1948, he said, is "a richly detailed and thoroughly researched primer.... A compelling 'aha' book, 1948 brings order to complex, little-understood subjects." He went on to compliment Morris on his "vivid narrative prose and masterly analysis."

Canada's National Post began running excerpts from 1948 on May 5, and will run a total of 5 installments. Read the second and third installments.

May Day and National Hamburger Month

120aoc_2_3 In honor of May Day, Slate ran an article on the best recent books about Communism. After reviewing some basics like the Communist Manifesto, they recommend the Annals of Communism series:

...Once you've got the surveys under your belt, you can turn to Yale University Press' Annals of Communism series, a unique publishing venture designed to make use of Soviet archives. Whether you want Andrei Sakharov's personal files, Stalin's correspondence with Molotov, or documents explaining the Katyn massacre, they're all available in beautifully edited and annotated translations. Don't miss John Haynes and Harvey Klehr's history of the American Communist Party (also a Yale book, also based on Soviet archives), either.

Read the entire article here.

9780300117585 May 1 is also the beginning of National Hamburger Month. Hamburger expert and Yale Press author Josh Ozersky reviewed New York's best burgers for the Daily News. Here is what the Daily News had to say in return about Ozersky and his new book, The Hamburger: A History:

If the city has a professor of patties, it's probably Josh Ozersky, the online food editor for New York magazine.

Not only does he test out several specimens a week, but he has just written a sexy little volume on the history of the patty from its 18th-century beginnings to its postwar boom thanks to White Castle.

Read the entire article here.

Yale Press wraps up Nat'l Poetry Month with awards and readings

9780300125511At their annual awards ceremony last night, The Publishing Triangle announced Janet Malcolm, author of the critically acclaimed Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice, as winner of the Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction. View the complete list of award winners here.

This remarkable work of literary biography and investigative journalism, turns on the mysterious survival of Stein and Toklas, as Jewish lesbians in Occupied France. Also a fascinating illumination of the world of Stein scholarship, and a stunningly perceptive work of criticism.

120younger_poets For those poety lovers in the New Haven area, the five most recent winners of the prestigious Yale Series of Younger Poets competition will read from their work on Friday, May 2nd.  Free and open to the public, the event will take place at the Whitney Humanities Center, 53 Wall Street, Room 208, at 4:00 p.m.

Awarded since 1919, the Yale Series of Younger Poets prize celebrates the most prominent new American poets by bringing the work of previously unpublished artists to the attention of the larger public.  Previous winners of the prize include such talents as Adrienne Rich, John Ashberry, and Robert Hass.  It is the longest-running poetry prize in the United States. More information on the event after the jump.

Continue reading "Yale Press wraps up Nat'l Poetry Month with awards and readings" »

Hartford Courant profiles Brent and YUP's digital Stalin archive

The Hartford Courant profiled Jonathan Brent, editorial director of Yale Press' Annals of Communism Project, and interviewed him about the Press's $1.3 million Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant to develop a digital documentary edition of Stalin's Personal Archive.

After sharing a story of Stalin's correspondences with director Sergei Eisenstein and novelist Upton Sinclair, the Courant said, "It is documents like the dispatch to Sinclair that distinguish Yale's Stalin archive." Read the entire article here.

The article in the Courant was picked up by the History News Network, as well as by RussiaTrek and cafe historia, who said, "This is surely what the web was designed to do. If only other institutions would follow suit."

120aoc_2_3 The digitization of Stalin's Personal Archive is a new initiative of Yale University Press' acclaimed Annals of Communism series, begun in 1992.  The digitized documents from this archive will become the basis for future scholarly research, while expediting traditional book publications on topics of great importance in understanding Soviet and twentieth-century world history.

Yale Press authors explore Broadway, investigate Roswell, and report on Latin America

9780300110517Especially in these winter months, it's hard to imagine a world without "Baby, It's Cold Outside" and other classic Frank Loesser tunes. Mark Steyn, reviewing Thomas L. Riis' Frank Loesser for the Wall Street Journal, realizes that "a world without Frank Loesser and 'Baby, It's Cold Outside' would be very cold indeed." Steyn calls Frank Loesser by Yale Press author Thomas L. Riis "a solid overview of an underappreciated talent." Steyn not only praises this "invaluable" book, but also Yale University Press as a whole for the "important and valuable Broadway Masters series of musicological studies." You can read the entire review here.

Frank Loesser, most famous for composing the ever-popular musical Guys and Dolls (1950), also wrote the music and lyrics for the Pulitzer prize-winning How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and other hits. This book is the first to bring the full story of Loesser’s life and creative achievement in Hollywood and on Broadway into the light.

9780300090000Elsewhere in the Wall Street Journal, Max Holland listed the "Five Best" books on untangling the rise of conspiracy theories. Number 2 was Yale Press' Enemies Within: The Culture of Conspiracy in Modern America by Robert Alan Goldberg, which Holland called "unrivaled" for books published within the past decade. You can see Holland's entire list here.

In this enthralling book Robert Goldberg focuses on conspiracy theories in post-World War II America, examining how they became popular and why they remain so. He investigates conspiracy theories surrounding the Roswell UFO incident, the Communist threat, the rise of the Antichrist, the assassination of President Kennedy, and the Jewish plot against black America. Those who suspect conspiracies are not confined to the lunatic fringe, Goldberg shows. In fact, paranoid rhetoric and thinking are disturbingly widespread and have become an integral part of American political culture.

9780300116168You can tune in tomorrow to KERA Texas public radio to hear Michael Reid, author of Forgotten Continent: The Battle for Latin America's Soul. His hour-long interview for Think with Krys Boyd will start at noon, February 12, and can be heard online here.

Latin America, home to half-a-billion people, the world's largest reserves of arable land, and 8.5 percent of global oil, is in the midst of a vast transformation. Michael Reid, a journalist with many years of experience in the region, explores Latin America's current shift to the political left, its struggle to compete economically, and the potential for democracy to flourish there.

Yale Press Awarded $1.3 Million Grant from Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

120aoc_2_3 Yale University Press is pleased to announce that it has received a $1.3 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to develop a digital documentary edition of Stalin's Personal Archive.

The digitization of Stalin's Personal Archive is a new initiative of Yale University Press's acclaimed Annals of Communism series, begun in 1992.  The digitized documents from this archive will become the basis for future scholarly research, while expediting traditional book publications on topics of great importance in understanding Soviet and twentieth-century world history.  Scholars worldwide will be able to investigate the rare primary source materials and documents contained in this archive without having to travel to Moscow where the archive is held and will be able to communicate their findings instantaneously online. The archive contains significant new materials relating to Stalin's political life and death:  documents concerning foreign policy with Germany before World War II; Stalin's communications with Nikolai Yezhov, head of the NKDV during the Great Purges; Stalin's directives to the Politburo after World War II; material illuminating his relations with Western intellectuals and political leaders, including Franklin D. Roosevelt; and his private notations concerning Lenin, Trotsky, Bukharin, and other Soviet leaders. It also contains inestimably important materials from Stalin's library.

Continue reading "Yale Press Awarded $1.3 Million Grant from Andrew W. Mellon Foundation" »

Janet Malcolm at a Chelsea reading

BandofThebes.com has put up this excellent picture of Yale Press author Janet Malcolm at a reading for her book Two Lives in Chelsea on Wednesday night.

Janet

Stephen Bottum, the blogger behind BandofThebes.com, likes Two Lives for the "many fascinating revelations in the slim book, which manages to say something new and important about the nature of biography, the quirks of writing, the work of reading, the unknowability of human actions, the ways in which biographers 'use' their minor characters, and how a scholar's overwhelming fear of not living up to early promise can ultimately prevent him from completing any work." He called the book "always engaging."

You can read his entire blog post here.

Michael Makovsky named Sami Rohr Prize Finalist

Michael Makovsky, author of Churchill's Promised Land: Zionism and Statecraft, has been named one of five finalists for this year's Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature. The Jewish Book Council, who administers the award, considers Churchill's Promised Land to be "a book of exceptional literary merit that stimulates an interest in themes of Jewish concern." One of the finalists will receive the $100,000 prize next spring. For more information on the prize, click here.

9780300116090This book is the first to explore fully the role that Zionism played in the political thought of Winston Churchill. Tracing the development of Churchill’s positions toward Zionism and the Jewish people throughout his long career, Michael Makovsky offers a fresh and balanced insight into one of the twentieth century’s greatest figures.

Michael Makovsky has a Ph.D. in diplomatic history from Harvard and is foreign policy director of the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank based in Washington, D.C. He lives in Washington.

Read an excerpt. View the table of contents. Listen to an interview with Michael Makovsky on the Yale Press Podcast.

Pearl Harbor remembered

In remembrance of the attack on Pearl Harbor 66 years ago today, here are some books related to the "day of infamy" and World War II.

9780300063684Crises in U.S. Foreign Policy: An International History Reader by Michael H. Hunt

Repeatedly in the twentieth century, the United States has been involved in confrontations with other countries, each with the potential for widespread international and domestic upheaval, even disaster. In this book Michael Hunt focuses on seven such crises, presenting for each an illuminating introduction and a rich collection of original documents. His epilogue considers the nature of international crises and the U.S. record in dealing with them.

9780300085532FDR and the Creation of the U.N. by Townsend Hoopes and Douglas Brinkley

In recent years the United Nations has become more active in—and more generally respected for—its peacekeeping efforts than at any other period in its fifty-year history. During the same period, the United States has been engaged in a debate about the place of the U.N. in the conduct of its foreign policy. This book, the first account of the American role in creating the United Nations, tells an engrossing story and also provides a useful historical perspective on the controversy.

97803001098011945: The War That Never Ended by Gregor Dallas

1945 is a monumental, multi-dimensional history of the end of World War II. Dallas narrates in meticulous detail the conflicts, contradictions, motives, and counter-motives that marked the end of the greatest military conflict in modern history and established lasting patterns of deceit, uncertainty, and distrust out of which the Cold War was born.

Three YUP books make NYT's Notable list

Notableinline190_3Yale University Press is proud to announce that three of our books have been chosen by the New York Times for their list of 100 Notable Books of 2007. Those books are Hugh Brogan's Alexis de Tocqueville: A Life, Janet Malcolm's Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice, and Tim Jeal's Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa's Greatest Explorer.

For their annual Holiday Books edition, the New York Times Sunday Book Review selects 100 "outstanding works from the last year." These three YUP books were selected from all of the books reviewed by the NYT since last year's list was printed on December 3, 2006. A print version of the list will run in the December 2, 2007 edition of the Book Review.

Read the NYT reviews for Alexis de Tocqueville, Two Lives, and Stanley. See the entire list here. Hear the Yale Press Podcast of Hugh Brogan discussing his book here.

In last year's 100 Notable Books of 2006, NYT chose Francis Fukuyama's America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy. You can read their review for that book here.

November is...

Aviation History Month! Check out some of the Yale University Press books that just fly off the shelves.

9780300068870 A Passion for Wings: Aviation and the Western Imagination, 1908-1918, by Robert Wohl

This elegantly written, copiously illustrated book presents the first cultural history of the pioneering phase of aviation. Robert Wohl's fascinating story describes Wilbur Wright and other colorful early aeronauts, aces such as Baron von Richthofen, and the enthusiastic responses to the implications of aviation by such writers and artists as H. G. Wells, Franz Kafka, Kazimir Malevich, Robert Delaunay, Gabriele D'Annunzio, and Emile Driant.

9780300122657 The Spectacle of Flight: Aviation and the Western Imagination, 1920-1950, by Robert Wohl

This extraordinary account of the development of aviation takes us from Charles Lindbergh’s dramatic New York-Paris flight to the horrifying bombing campaigns of World War II. Robert Wohl recaptures in words and illustrations an era when a wide-ranging cast of characters—among them millionaire Howard Hughes, Italian dictator Mussolini, and architect Le Corbusier—fell under aviation’s spell.

9780300122640 The Unknown Battle of Midway: The Destruction of the American Torpedo Squadrons, by Alvin Kernan

What really happened at the Battle of Midway, one of the greatest naval victories of the Second World War? This wrenching book, told by a survivor of the battle, provides the first accurate account and explanation of the devastating losses to America’s torpedo squadrons: only 7 of 51 planes returned, only 29 of 127 crewmen survived, and not a single torpedo hit its target.

Read an excerpt or view the table of contents.

YUP authors on the airwaves

9780300100983 Ben Kiernan was interviewed by Lewis Lapham, former Harper's editor and now editor of Lapham's Quarterly. They discussed Kiernan's recently released Blood and Soil on Lapham's radio program "The World in Time," which aired this past Sunday, October 28. The interview is posted on Lewis Lapham's website at Lapham Quarterly, or can be heard here.

Ben Kiernan will also appear on Book TV later in November. If you missed Kiernan's recent discussion about his book at the Harvard Book Store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, or if you just want to hear him speak again, tune in on on Sunday, November 25, at 7:00 AM. For more information, click here.

9780300124989 Daniel Solove will be on KERA Dallas Public Radio's excellent hour-long program Think on November 5 at 1pm local time. Solove is the author of The Future of Reputation.This engrossing book explores the profound implications of personal information on the Internet, preserved forever even if it is false, biased, or humiliating. Brimming with examples of online gossip, slander, and rumor, the book discusses the tensions between privacy and free speech and proposes how to balance the two. What information about you is on the Internet?

Bernd Brunner will be appearing on NPR's The Diane Rehm Show on December 3. Brunner's Bears: A Brief History was released by Yale University Press earlier this month. Trita Parsi, author of Treacherous Alliance, was also guest on The Diane Rehm Show earlier this month to talk about his new book.

9780300122992 Brunner's engaging book examines the shared history of people and bears. Hopscotching through history, literature, and science, Bernd Brunner presents a delightfully illustrated compendium of information about different cultures’ attitudes toward bears, the central place of bears in our myths and dreams, how our images of bears do and do not mesh with reality, and more.

Political leaders are political readers, too

In the past month, important political figures have been seen with books published by Yale University Press: Charm Offensive: How China's Soft Power Is Transforming the World by Joshua Kurlantzick and Churchill's Promised Land: Zionism and Statecraft by Michael Makovsky.

On September 6, 2007, President Bush met with Kevin Rudd, the Leader of the Opposition in the Australian Parliament. The Sydney Morning Herald's international editor Peter Hartcher reported that Rudd "handed the leader of the free world two books." One of these books was Charm Offensive: How China's Soft Power Is Transforming the World by Joshua Kurlantzick.

Read the entire article.

9780300117035Through new foreign policy tactics that rely on charm instead of intimidation, China is developing stronger alliances with many nations around the globe. Charm Offensive is the first to examine the significance of this new diplomacy focused on soft power and looks at what Beijing’s global ambitions may mean for the U.S. and the world.
Read an excerpt, or view the table of contents.

On September 23rd, 2007, David Cracknell of the The Sunday Times reported that England's Prime Minister Gordon Brown has a copy on hand of Churchill's Promised Land: Zionism and Statecraft by Michael Makovsky.

Brown is a voracious reader.... On the table next to his desk are Churchill’s Promised Land, Thatcher’s Statecraft and a collection of Nelson Man-dela’s speeches: hard going for most, staple matter for Gordon. It will all go into the big speech to conference tomorrow.

Read the entire article.
9780300116090 This book, Churchill's Promised Land, is the first to explore fully the role that Zionism played in the political thought of Winston Churchill. Tracing the development of Churchill’s positions toward Zionism and the Jewish people throughout his long career, Michael Makovsky offers a fresh and balanced insight into one of the twentieth century’s greatest figures.
Read an excerpt, or view the table of contents.

Both of these books are part of the New Republic Book series, published by Yale University Press. In conjunction with The New Republic magazine, Yale University Press publishes books and pamphlets on a range of perspectives on American and international politics as well as the world of arts, letters, and culture.

News and reviews for Kiernan's Blood and Soil

Reviewers are finding Ben Kiernan's newest book, Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and Extermination from Sparta to Darfur, to be an engaging look at an important and timely subject.

In a review for the October 8th issue of The New Republic, Michael Ignatieff calls Blood and Soil "a formidable and important book.... Ben Kiernan has provided the most extensive history of [humanity's] genocidal propensities that I have ever read."

Subscribers to The New Republic can read the whole article here.

Graeme Wood of The New York Sun says that the book "plumbs the mens rea of the ethnic cleanser.... Each case is written sharply enough to escape the aroma of potted history that sometimes afflicts comparative studies of this type or political accounts."

Read the entire New York Sun review here.

Also, Jerry Fowler of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum talked to Ben Kiernan on his program Voices on Genocide Prevention. You can hear a podcast of that interview, or read the transcript.

9780300100983

Read an excerpt of Blood and Soil.

View the table of contents.

Two Lives reviews flow in, plus an upcoming reading by Malcolm

Janet Malcolm's recently published Two Lives has attracted a deluge of major media attention, including a nod from the New York Times Sunday Book Review. The Editor's Choice list praises Two Lives as "sharp criticism meets playful, absorbing biography." To see this week's complete list, click here.

9780300125511

The Wall Street Journal's John Gross also raves about Two Lives, calling it "shrewd, humane and beautifully written." He goes on to say that Malcolm's book is "woven together with a more general consideration of their lives and personalities -- a very acute one....She makes Stein's work seem more meaningful than most commentators do by bringing out its full psychological interest. And while she doesn't flinch from showing Stein at her worst, she reminds us of her good qualities too."

Read the entire Wall Street Journal review.

Christine Smallwood of Salon.com also reviewed the book recently, remarking that many "will find Janet Malcolm's Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice hard to put down." The book is part of Malcolm's "ongoing investigation into narrative," and it "powerfully demonstrates how [Stein's and Toklas'] images have been built and passed down to us....The biographer's game is a kind of treasure hunt, and Two Lives lays bare its rules."
Read the entire Salon.com review.

Malcolm will also be reading at the 92nd Street Y this coming Sunday, October 7th as part of the Brunch Series. Sign up for Yale Press Log's RSS feed to stay in touch with additional YUP author events and media appearances.

Read an excerpt of Two Lives.
View the table of contents.

Ben Kiernan at Labyrinth Books New Haven

9780300100983Labyrinth Books New Haven will host Ben Kiernan on Wednesday, October 10th at 5:30pm to celebrate his recently published Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and Extermination from Sparta to Darfur. This book party and conversation is free and open to the public. For more details and information on the event, click here. For a list of all Labyrinth Books events, visit labyrinthbooks.com.

Ben Kiernan is the A. Whitney Griswold Professor of History, professor of international and area studies, and the founding director of the Genocide Studies Program at Yale University (www.yale.edu/gsp). His previous books include How Pol Pot Came to Power: Colonialism, Nationalism, and Communism in Cambodia, 1930–1975 and The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power, and Genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-1979, published by Yale University Press.

Read an excerpt.

View the table of contents.

"The World's Greatest Aviation Celebration" starts today

Today marks the start of the annual EAA Airventure in Oshkosh, WI. From demonstrations to new innovations, airplane rides to stunt shows, this weeklong event draws enthusiasts from all over the world, with over 750,000 attendees, making it the largest aviation event in the world.

9780300122657For aviation lovers and history buffs, Robert Wohl's The Spectacle of Flight, is an extraordinary account of the development of aviation, taking us from Charles Lindbergh’s dramatic New York-Paris flight to the horrifying bombing campaigns of World War II. Wohl recaptures in words and illustrations an era when a wide-ranging cast of characters—among them millionaire Howard Hughes, Italian dictator Mussolini, and architect Le Corbusier—fell under aviation’s spell. New in paperback and generously illustrated with rare photographs, paintings, and posters, this book offers a gripping account of aviation and its hold on the popular imagination during the years between 1920 and 1950.

The Unfree French

0300121326 A review of Richard Vinen's The Unfree French, a new social history of France under the Vichy regime, appears in the most recent issue of the New York Review of Books.

"Vinen provides much interesting information," writes Robert Paxton in the review. "A large number of prisoners of war, for example, were not behind barbed wire but worked in Germany, many of them voluntarily, and under a great variety of conditions, sometimes not unpleasant. (It is worth recalling to American readers that--except for some American Jewish soldiers--Hitler largely observed the Geneva Convention for his American prisoners of war, not necessarily from softness of heart but because he wanted German prisoners to have the same protection.)

"Vinen explores the great variety of relations between women and German soldiers in the absence of most French young men, culminating in the punishment of 'horizontal collaborators' by vehement crowds at the end of the war.

"Vinen shows also that the general jubilation at American liberation was considerably tempered in the bombed cities of Normandy. Most Americans have no idea that Allied bombing killed 60,000 French civilians, far more than German bombing, and that French people who experienced the bombing gave (and still give) the Americans who bombed at night from high altitudes low marks for courage and accuracy.

"In general, whereas World War I enhanced French national unity, World War II, with its occupied and unoccupied zones, its hungry cities and well-fed farmers, its profiteers and victims, its free and unfree, shattered it."

Read the complete review.

And the Emmy goes to...

SalvagedThe National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences announced on July 18 that I’m Still Here, a documentary based on the diaries of young Holocaust victims, has been nominated for two Emmy Awards. The first category is Outstanding Historical Programming (Long Form), and the second is Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Editing. The documentary, which aired in May 2005 on MTV, is based on the diaries collected by Alexandra Zapruder in Salvaged Pages: Young Writers’ Diaries of the Holocaust, published by Yale University Press in 2002. Zapruder was a co-producer of the documentary.

The New York Times called I’m Still Here “a masterly documentary and proof that there are still more and decent ways to remember the Holocaust.” Actors including Elijah Wood, Ryan Gosling, Kate Hudson, Zach Braff, Brittany Murphy, and Joaquin Phoenix read the diaries. The New York Times quoted Murphy who read the words of an anonymous girl from the ghetto in Lotz, Poland:

“Today I had a fight with my father. It happened because yesterday I weighed 20 decagrams of noodles and sneaked a spoonful.” After reporting on the argument, she says: “My father is not going to forgive me. We would be a happy family if I didn't fight with everybody. All of the fights are started by me. I would like to be different, but I don't have a strong enough will.”
Two days later, the anonymous girl concludes, in Ms. Murphy's languorous lisp, “my father told me to come to his workshop and get some soup.” She continues, “After all, a father is always a father.”

Salvaged Pages: Young Writers’ Diaries of the Holocaust, which also won the 2001-02 National Jewish Book Award in the Holocaust category, is a collection of diaries written by young people during the Holocaust and is now available in paperback. Zapruder assesses the value of these literary fragments as part of the historical record of the Holocaust and provides informative introductions about when and where each diary was written.

“When fear crawls out in the evenings from all four corners, when the winter storm raging outside tells you it is winter, and that it is difficult to live in the winter, when my soul trembles at the sight of distant fantasies, I shiver and say one word with every heartbeat, every pulse, every piece of my soul—liberation.”—from the diary of Elsa Binder, Stanislawów ghetto, 1942.

The diary breaks off mid-sentence. She surely perished, but the exact circumstances of her death are unknown.

Zapruder was the exhibition researcher and educator for the permanent and traveling versions of Remember the Children, Daniel’s Story at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. I’m Still Here will also be donated to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and Simon Wiesenthal Center to be screened as a part of their permanent collections.

Memorial Day

On Monday, May 29, Americans will observe Memorial Day, commemorating the U.S. men and women whose lives were lost, and continue to be lost, in military service for their country. The day marks a fitting occasion to look back at the wars which have defined our nation's history and the American soldiers who fought and died in them to ensure our way of life.

Midway_2The Battle of Midway is considered the greatest U.S. naval victory of World War II, which turned the tide of the war in the Pacific. Behind the luster, however, is the devastation of the American torpedo squadrons. The Unknown Battle of Midway: The Destruction of the American Torpedo Squadrons, written by Alvin Kernan, a survivor of the battle, tells the wrenching story of the devastating losses to America's torpedo squadrons: Of the 51 planes sent to attack Japanese carriers only 7 returned, and of the 127 aircrew only 29 survived. Not a single torpedo hit its target.

Hitler_and_stalinFrom John Lukacs, the renowned best-selling author of Five Days in London, comes June 1941: Hitler and Stalin, an unparalleled drama of the momentous confrontation between these two leaders in June 1941. "A fascinating and masterfully researched book" (Henry Kissinger)," June 1941 vividly describes the strange, calculating, and miscalculating relationship between Hitler and Stalin before the German invasion of Soviet Russia, with its gigantic (and unintended) consequences.

RememberingRemembering War: The Great War between Memory and History in the 20th Century traces the origins of the current fascination with memory back to World War I. Historian Jay Winter discusses how images, languages, and practices that developed in the wake of the Great War shaped the way later conflicts and victims were remembered both publicly and privately. The result is a "highly original" book, says John Horne, which "will stand alone as the contribution by a leading historian of the Great War to the field."

My_dear_mr_stalinIn the midst of the most heated crisis of the Second World War, Roosevelt and Stalin secretly exchanged three hundred letters. My Dear Mr. Stalin: The Complete Correspondence of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph V. Stalin, edited with commentary by Susan Butler, is the first publication in any language that contains the entire collection of hot-war messages passed between the two men. The book is "a history junkie's delight" (Publishers Weekly) that will serve as an invaluable primary source for understanding the relationship that developed between these two great leaders during a time of supreme world crisis.

1945_11945: The War That Never Ended, by Gregor Dallas, is a monumental, multi-dimensional history of the end of World War II. Dallas narrates in meticulous detail the conflicts, contradictions, motives, and counter-motives that marked the end of the greatest military conflict in modern history and established lasting patterns of deceit, uncertainty, and distrust out of which the Cold War was born. "This is a not-to-be-forgotten read," says Noble Frankland in The Spectator, "by an author of outstanding quality."

We Wept Without Tears

0300106513Tomorrow, the 27th of Nisan on the Hebrew calendar, is Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. This day is set aside each year to remember the approximately six million Jews who were killed in the Holocaust, since, as Elie Wiesel said, "For us, forgetting was never an option. Remembering is a noble and necessary act."

We Wept Without Tears: Testimonies of the Jewish Sonderkommando from Auschwitz, by Gideon Greif, preserves the memories and experiences of those Jewish prisoners who were forced by the Germans to facilitate the mass extermination. Though never involved in the killing itself, the Sonderkommando were compelled to be "members of staff" of the Nazi death-factory. The book, translated for the first time into English from its original Hebrew, consists of interviews with the very few survivors who witnessed first hand the unparalleled horror of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp.

"This is a book that must be read by all who dare draw close to the killing, those who dare to come close--as close as non-survivors can come--to the inferno," says Michael Berenbaum. The book provides direct testimony about the "Final Solution of the Jewish Problem" and documents the helplessness and powerlessness of the one-and-a-half million people, ninety percent of them Jews, who were brutally murdered in the gas chambers of Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Read an excerpt from We Wept Without Tears.

Sketches from a Secret War

Sketches Aspiring artist turned intelligence operative, powerful statesman, and underground activist, Henryk Józewski was an instrumental figure in the battle for Polish independence during the tumultuous decades of the early and mid twentieth century. He put down his paintbrush long enough to direct Polish intelligence in Ukraine, govern the borderland region of Volhynia in the interwar years, work in the anti-Nazi and anti-Soviet underground during the Second World War, and conspire against Poland’s Stalinists until his arrest in 1953.

Józewski’s adventurous career as artist and freedom-fighter is expertly told by Timothy Snyder in Sketches from a Secret War: A Polish Artist’s Mission to Liberate Soviet Ukraine. Hailed by Foreign Affairs as a “compact, well-told history,” the book mines archival materials, many available only since the fall of communism, to rescue Józewski, his Polish milieu, and his Ukrainian dream from oblivion.

Timothy Snyder, says the latest issue of Kritika, is “perhaps his generation’s leading historian of the region that used to be known as Eastern Europe.” Commending the “unusually elegant prose” of the author’s first two books—one of which, The Reconstruction of Nations, also published by Yale University Press, was awarded the 2003 George Louis Beer Prize of the American Historical Association—the review goes on to call Sketches from a Secret War “his most compelling book so far.”

Wearing Propaganda

0300109253 A silk omiyamairi (newborn's shrine-visiting kimono) depicting potent battle imagery, a scarf emblazoned with Nelson's battle slogan, "England expects that every man shall do his duty," and a dress showing soldiers in rank and file around the Great Seal of the United States are a few of the approximately 130 pieces on display in "Wearing Propaganda: Textiles on the Home Front in Japan, Britain and the United States," at the Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design and Culture.

"This voluminous spread," says Grace Glueck in the New York Times, "is a rarity in that extensive studies embracing propaganda and its outlets have mostly left out the vehicle of textiles. With gusto and commendable diligence, 'Wearing Propaganda' sets out to remedy that neglect."

Many of objects on view, especially the Japanese, are previously unknown and never before documented, exhibited, or photographed, making this "a one-of-a-kind experience for anyone interested in the evolution of Japanese popular design."

The catalogue accompanying the exhibition is published by the Bard Graduate Center in collaboration with Yale University Press. "Wearing Propaganda" runs through February 5, 2006, at the Bard Graduate Center.

The Unknown Battle of Midway

"The Unknown Battle of Midway is a memoir and more," writes Robert Messenger in the Wall Street Journal. "Mr. Kernan brings this maritime battle superbly to life. He explains the whole history of the U.S. carriers and their arsenal and the commanders and pilots who were trying to learn on the job. And he narrates the air assault in gripping detail." Learn more about what Messenger describes as "one of our nation's most dazzling feats of arms, [which occurred] just six months after the disastrous surprise attack on Pearl Harbor."