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Paris 1919

Six Months That Changed the World

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0 of 3 copies available
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Winner of the Samuel Johnson Prize, renowned historian Margaret MacMillan's best-selling Paris 1919 is the story of six remarkable months that changed the world. At the close of WWI, between January and July of 1919, delegates from around the world converged on Paris under the auspices of peace. New countries were created, old empires were dissolved, and for six months, Paris was the center of the world. Bringing to vivid life the individuals who participated in the great Peace Conference—including Woodrow Wilson, Winston Churchill, Lawrence of Arabia, and Ho Chi Minh—Paris 1919 is a landmark work of narrative history.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The fog of war, when it ended in Europe in 1918, left four great empires in shambles. The Versailles peace conference, however, merely ushered in what could be called the fog of peace, as the battlefield became the conference table, a fog that continues to our day, as the maps of the Balkans, Africa, and the Middle East attest. What happened to the hopes of the world for justice and self-determination when they met at that table with the competing demands of new and old nationalisms? That is the stuff of Margaret MacMillan's award-winning study. Suzanne Toren's intuitive understanding of MacMillan's text raises her narration from mere reading to a new level of intimacy and immediacy. She is so in tune with the author's irony and nuance that it's difficult to believe we are only listening to history, not the author herself (great-granddaughter of Britain's David Lloyd George) recounting the events and personalities who met that spring and summer in Paris 1919. But history it is--and vital at that, if we are to understand how historic mistakes transform themselves later into world crises. P.E.F. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 22, 2002
      A joke circulating in Paris early in 1919 held that the peacemaking Council of Four, representing Britain, France, the U.S. and Italy, was busy preparing a "just and lasting war." Six months of parleying concluded on June 28 with Germany's coerced agreement to a treaty no Allied statesman had fully read, according to MacMillan, a history professor at the University of Toronto, in this vivid account. Although President Wilson had insisted on a League of Nations, even his own Senate would vote the league down and refuse the treaty. As a rush to make expedient settlements replaced initial negotiating inertia, appeals by many nationalities for Wilsonian self-determination would be overwhelmed by rhetoric justifying national avarice. The Italians, who hadn't won a battle, and the French, who'd been saved from catastrophe, were the greediest, says MacMillan; the Japanese plucked Pacific islands that had been German and a colony in China known for German beer. The austere and unlikable Wilson got nothing; returning home, he suffered a debilitating stroke. The council's other members horse-traded for spoils, as did Greece, Poland and the new Yugoslavia. There was, Wilson declared, "disgust with the old order of things," but in most decisions the old order in fact prevailed, and corrosive problems, like Bolshevism, were shelved. Hitler would blame Versailles for more ills than it created, but the signatories often could not enforce their writ. MacMillan's lucid prose brings her participants to colorful and quotable life, and the grand sweep of her narrative encompasses all the continents the peacemakers vainly carved up. 16 pages of photos, maps.

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  • English

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