History always comes down to the details. And when it
comes to the fall of the Soviet Union, the details are
crucial, especially when such an era-defining event
hinged on the bitter personal relationship between two
powerful men, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin. On
the twentieth anniversary of the end of the Cold War,
Conor O'Clery has built his compelling and brilliantly
constructed narrative of the fall of the Soviet Union
around one day, December 25, 1991, the date Gorbachev
resigned and the USSR was effectively consigned to
history. From there, O'Clery looks back over the events
of the previous six years: Gorbachev's reform policies
of glasnost and perestroika; Yeltsin's ignominious fall
and then rise to the top; the defiance of the once
docile Soviet republics; the failed August coup by the
hardliners; and, the events that swiftly followed until
a secret meeting in a central European forest sealed the
fate of the communist monolith and the clock ticked down
to the last day.The result is an intricately detailed,
thoroughly researched book, based on interviews with
many of the key figures in a drama of Shakespearean
intensity as well as contemporary reportage, the memoirs
and diaries of key political figures and official
documents. The book is written at a breathtaking,
dramatic pace, drawing the reader in as it focuses
equally on the personal and historical stories.
''Moscow, December 25, 1991'' is set to become a
defining book on the fall of the Soviet Union. |
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