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A man of indomitable will and fierce determination, Georgy Zhukov was the Soviet Union's indispensable commander through every one of the critical turning points of World War II. It was Zhukov who saved Leningrad from capture by the Wehrmacht in September 1941, Zhukov who led the defense of Moscow in October 1941, Zhukov who spearheaded the Red Army's march on Berlin and formally accepted Germany's unconditional surrender in the spring of 1945. Drawing on the latest research from recently opened Soviet archives, including the uncensored versions of Zhukov's own memoirs, Roberts offers a vivid portrait of a man whose tactical brilliance was matched only by the cold-blooded ruthlessness with which he pursued his battlefield objectives.
After the war, Zhukov was a key player on the geopolitical scene. As Khrushchev's defense minister, he was one of the architects of Soviet military strategy during the Cold War. While lauded in the West as a folk hero—he was the only Soviet general ever to appear on the cover of Time magazine—Zhukov repeatedly ran afoul of the Communist political authorities. Wrongfully accused of disloyalty, he was twice banished and erased from his country's official history—left out of books and paintings depicting Soviet World War II victories. Piercing the hyperbole of the Zhukov personality cult, Roberts debunks many of the myths that have sprung up around Zhukov's life and career to deliver fresh insights into the marshal's relationships with Stalin, Khrushchev, and Eisenhower.
A remarkably intimate portrait of a man whose life was lived behind an Iron Curtain of official secrecy, Stalin's General is an authoritative biography that restores Zhukov to his rightful place in the twentieth-century military pantheon.
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Creators
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Release date
June 5, 2012 -
Formats
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780679645177
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780679645177
- File size: 7502 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
May 1, 2012
A welcome new biography of the ruthless Red Army general who defeated the Nazis and then spent decades alternately disgraced and rehabilitated in Soviet Russia. Roberts (History/University College Cork; Stalin's Wars, 2007, etc.) relies less on his subject's self-glorifying memoirs and more on newly available archival material in Russia. Zhukov's relationship with Stalin emerges as a key, fascinating aspect to the story, as Zhukov, a rising cavalry commander in the rapidly modernizing Red Army, managed to escape being a victim of the army purges of 1937-38 and was then appointed on his first important mission for Stalin: to "conduct a purge" of the Japanese from the Mongolian-Manchurian border in 1939. The victory at Khalkhin-Gol was the Red Army's first real triumph, deflecting the Japanese from Russia and establishing Zhukov as a brilliant offensive field commander who kept his cool under fire and was not averse to administering draconian discipline to his own men. Stalin had neglected defensive preparation of the Motherland in favor of the counterattack, and he summoned Zhukov after the disastrous response to Hitler's Operation Barbarossa. From victory at Yel'nya to saving Leningrad and Moscow ("no surrender and no retreat; counterattack wherever and whenever possible") to Operation Bagration in Belorussia, Zhukov spared no number of Russia soldiers in his path to victory. Roberts spends a good deal of space on Zhukov's mysterious postwar dismissal to the provinces, due no doubt to his overweening confidence and "Bonapartist" self-aggrandizement, which grated on Stalin. He resurfaced supremely under Khrushchev and died a fitting hero in 1974. A solid, engaging life.COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
November 1, 2011
Marshal of the Soviet Union as of 1943 and hence a key player at the battles of Moscow, Stalingrad, and Kursk, Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov was a leading general of World War II. In fact, some scholars argue that he effectively won the war for the Allies. Roberts has written extensively about the war in Russia and should deliver a thoroughgoing biography for lay reader and scholar alike.
Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
June 1, 2012
The Soviet Union's most prominent WWII general, Georgy Zhukov, resolves into an important but flawed character in this portrait by an expert on Soviet military history. Roberts capitalizes on access to archives, including a prescient report from 1930 describing Zhukov as Wilful. Decisive . . . insufficiently tactful. These traits grated on fellow Soviet generals during the war and fueled a subsequent battle of memoirs, which furnish Roberts with another fruitful source for describing the manner of the man, personally and professionally. Apprenticed as a furrier, Zhukov was drafted into the czarist army. When it collapsed in 1917, he joined the Bolshevik Red Army and rose on the strength of his military competence and political reliability. His career became meteoric after defeating a Japanese force in 1939, but Roberts does not exempt Zhukov from criticism for cold indifference to the colossal casualties inherent to the battering-ram offensives he directed. Rounding his biography with the postwar Zhukov as a Soviet cold warrior and his private life as father of several children by different women, Roberts makes the only English-language Zhukov biography a WWII essential.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)
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Formats
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
Languages
- English
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