Anne Applebaum is the author of Gulag- A History, which won the Pulitzer Prize, of Iron Curtain- The Crushing of Eastern Europe, 1944-1956, which won the Cundill Prize, of Red Famine- Stalin's War on Ukraine which won the Lionel Gelber and Duff Cooper prizes, and of the best-selling Twilight of Democracy. She is a columnist for The Atlantic and a senior fellow at Johns Hopkins University. She divides her time between Britain, Poland and the USA
Applebaum's reflections on the anti-democratic pandemic sweeping
our world offer an extraordinary mix of personal witness and
dispassionate historical analysis.... It's unlikely that anyone
will ever give us more sensitive or revealing insights on this
question
*New Statesman*
Heretics make the best writers. ... Applebaum can bring a candle
into the darkness of the populist right ... her writing is an
arsenal that stores the sharpest weapons to hand.
*Observer*
Applebaum's progress ...has yielded an enviable supply of raw
material for her narrative. She mines her sources
doggedly....Twilight of Democracy is a rather penetrating work of
ethnography
*The Times*
Advancing her arguments with eloquence and personal testimony,
Applebaum passionately decries the corrosion of liberal,
open-society values in the last three decades.
*Project Syndicate*
written with deep insight, experience and wisdom. Definitely a very
important book for understanding our troubled times and the
fragility of our democracies
*Daily Mail*
Anne Applebaum's Twilight of Democracy is the most important
non-fiction book of the year because it asks the most urgent
question: why is the right wing in the West moving so far to the
right? Why is it, at this point in history, so drawn to
authoritarianism? Why has it given up on democracy?'
*New Statesman Books of the Year*
this engrossing account ... is a political book; it is also
intensely personal, and the more powerful for it.
*Guardian*
Applebaum, long an authority on the abuses of Communist and
post-Communist Eastern Europe, in her new book Twilight of
Democracy is unsparing in exposing the moral bankruptcy of Trumpian
Republicanism. Her sharp pen is as persuasive as any in presenting
the idea of the "west" as a morally serious project-and one whose
loss we may come to mourn.
*Prospect*
A brilliant writer who sheds light on the most disturbing political
phenomenon of our era: the rise of rightwing authoritarianism
around the world... a cry of alarm and a call to arms.... We have
been warned.
*Financial Times*
readable, eloquent and passionate ... Applebaum knows what the
enemy looks like from the inside, and how it thinks. This book may
only be a start. We should cherish her. I think she has a lot more
she can tell us.
*The New European*
This richly informed book enlarges her account of the enormous
peril in which the democracy we took so casually for granted now
stands.
*New Statesman Books of the Year*
Applebaum's book asks why conservatives in the West have so
willingly embraced deceipt, corruption and authoritarianism. She
has answers, too.
*The Week*
From Brexit Britain and Donald Trump's America to the cynical
politics of Poland and Hungary, she feels beset by a new chauvinist
right that has no regard for rules, truth or institutions. Ms
Applebaum evokes an acute sense of betrayal as people she trusted
turn against her, quicker than she thought possible. Her personal
story is a parable of what can happen to alliances in the absence
of a common adversary, and when the hardships such enemies
inflicted fade from memory.
*Economist*
This is an illuminating political memoir about the break-up of the
political tribe that won the Cold War.
*Literary Review*
Equal parts memoir, reportage, and history, this sobering account
of the roots and forms of today's authoritarianism, by one of its
most accomplished observers, is meant as a warning to everyone. ...
critically important for its muscular, oppositionist attack on the
new right from within conservative ranks-and for the
well-documented warning it embodies. The author's views are
especially welcome because she is a deliberate thinker and astute
observer rather than just the latest pundit or politico. In the
spirit of Julien Benda, Hannah Arendt, and Theodor Adorno,
Applebaum seeks to understand what makes the new right "more
Bolshevik than Burkean."... A knowledgeable, rational, necessarily
dark take on dark realities.
*Kirkus Reviews*
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