The Cold War Audiobook By John Lewis Gaddis cover art

The Cold War

A New History

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The Cold War

By: John Lewis Gaddis
Narrated by: Jay Gregory, Alan Sklar
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About this listen

It began during World War II, when American and Soviet troops converged from East and West. Their meeting point, a small German city, became part of a front line that solidified shortly thereafter into an Iron Curtain. It ended in a climactic square-off between Ronald Reagan's America and Gorbachev's Soviet Union. In between were decades of global confrontation, uncertainty, and fear.

Drawing on new and often startling information from newly opened Soviet, Eastern European, and Chinese archives, this thrilling account explores the strategic dynamics that drove the Cold War, provides illuminating portraits of its major personalities, and offers much fresh insight into its most crucial events. Riveting, revelatory, and wise, it tells a story whose lessons it is vitally necessary to understand as America once more faces an implacable ideological enemy.

©2006 John Lewis Gaddis (P)2013 HighBridge Company
20th Century Americas International Relations Modern Politics & Government Russia United States World Cold War Military War Imperialism Eastern Europe Self-Determination Thought-Provoking Inspiring Interwar Period City American Foreign Policy Soviet Union
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Critic reviews

"Thrilling....An utterly engrossing account of Soviet-U.S. relations from WWII to the collapse of the U.S.S.R....A new, concise narration was Gaddis's aim here, and he succeeds royally." ( Publishers Weekly)

What listeners say about The Cold War

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Gripping explanation of the Cold War, start to end

What did you love best about The Cold War?

This is a must read for those interested in how the West and the USSR, partners during WWII, turned into bitter rivals. Gaddis does a masterful job in painting the closing days of the second world war into the first salvos of what would later become the Cold War. He then thoroughly analyzes many important periods of the era, including the nuclear building, confrontation over Berlin, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam, the election of Reagan.

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1 person found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Poorly Formatted, Monotone Reader

This is one of Gaddis' best Cold War books because it's more reader-friendly and offers more insight into the world, overall, than some other authors. That being said, this is the most boring reader imaginable. Because it's a history text, it already airs on the dry side, but the reader just makes it worse. My primary issue with this book is the formatting. The chapters of the audiobook don't line up to the chapters in the physical book and you have to scrub through the chapters to find the starting point, which is especially annoying if you've read some of the book but want to continue reading with audio or want to pick up where you left off.

This is a nice resource if you need help getting through the book, but if you want to get this book for fun, **because it is a tremendously informative and engaging read**, but I would say get the physical book and ignore this audiobook. :/ Your inner reading-voice is likely MUCH more engaging than this reader.

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great work!

very well presented and researched. great value for the time and money it costs to get through it.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Not a Chronological History

John Lewis Gaddis in The Cold War approaches the Cold War from a number of different perspectives. Each is covered in one of seven chapters and an Epilogue. The most valuable to me were the last chapter “The Triumph of Hope” in which the Berlin Wall falls and the “Epilogue: The View Back” in which he summarizes what the Cold War meant. Individuals looking for a chronological history will not find it here, but the book is insightful and engrossing nonetheless. There are surprises even for those of old enough to have lived through the entire era. I particularly found the sections concerning Eisenhower’s misleading the public initially about Gary Powers and the U-2 interesting. Gaddis follows this theme of dishonesty through the Bay of Pigs and even Nixon’s fiasco. His explanation for FDR’s New Deal in geo-political context is interesting. Along the way, I felt that Gaddis treated every play (Republican and Democrat) in a balanced manner. This is a very good book and worthy of anyone willing to devote the time to it. The reading of Jay Gregory and Alan Sklar is excellent

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

A Captivating Way Of Telling History

I really enjoyed listening to this audio book, in particular the way that the author (and narrator) had a compelling way of telling history and making it fascinating. I'm just over 50 years of age, so when so much of the Cold War and other historical events of the time were going on, I like most young people, had very little interest in the events of the day....especially since so much of it was being shoved down my throat in school. I wish I had audible books back then, I just might have been a straight A student! (<:

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Very good

This is a very nice book. You need some technical knowledge of how nuclear power plants work to understand the chapter where it talks about the technicalities of the accident, but otherwise it's a very pleasant read. I recommend.

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Informative read

I had to read this for a college course..it was very informative…it was tricky to get a timeline from it as it bounced around a bit but once you read it in its entirety you get a full picture. I do feel like it was from a somewhat biased American perspective as you could sense in the language and adjectives used for each sides leaders. Would love to see the KGB intel on our great countries morally superior leaders. No mention of the thousands they were drugging, murdering, poisoning, sterilizing and oppressing in their own country during this time which would of made a more complete, forthright, objective and comprehensive, historically accurate telling of American Cold War history.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

My son recommended this book - He was right!

My eldest son called me while listening to this book on a road trip. He was fascinated by it, and told me to see if Audible had it. The kid has right! This is a fascinating read. The author does a good job of connecting the flow of history from Stalin through Viet Nam through Reagan. Nothing happens in a vacuum. This excellent resource in connecting the dots.
The narration also was excellent. A winner on all fronts!

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8 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

A good enough Orthodox History of the Cold War

Ignore the the title, this book is no way a "new" history. Some of the sources may be new but the interpretation is solidly Orthodox and traditional.

Sometimes that can be helpful. Other times it can be infuriating when the author gets it exactly wrong. And like the men he covers the author's feel for the subject at hand is sure and steady when the subject is Europe and highly questionable when the subject at hand is Asia or the post colonial "Third Word."

As an overview of nearly fifty years of history, a history that a whole generation has now not lived though, it has its uses. I would use it for a 101 or 102 course, but only as an example of "Orthodox History" and the flaws inherent in the constructing of such history. It would have to be balanced out by other books on the same subject.

If you go in knowing that this is a history of Cold War as told by a Cold Warrior you will have the right mind set for the listen.

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Very informative

Loved it. Before this book I knew nothing about the cold war, now I feel like I'm knowledgeable about it. Now I really understand the timeline, major events and actors. Narrator is excellent too. I only wish it had talked more about the Korean and Vietnam wars, so I'll have to learn about that from a different source.

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