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Geoffrey
Wheatcroft in The Times Literary Supplement: "Once
Cold War succeeded World War, radio became one of its fiercest
battlefields, the subject of Michael Nelson's informative and absorbing
book."
Oleg
Gordievsky, former KGB agent, in Literary Review: "I
am glad to find a deep and thorough book about the history of British and
other Western radio broadcasting to the East, with an attempt at a serious
analysis of its impact on the political and social processes of that part
of Europe."
Michael
Redley in Intermedia: "Michael
Nelson tells a thrilling tale." Michael
Palmer in Réseaux: ".........in
some 200 pages he incisively retraces the history of East-West radio
propaganda in the Cold War ........." Gene
Sosin, in The New Leader: "Michael
Nelson's pioneering War of the Black Heavens illuminates the entire
spectrum of Western shortwave broadcasting, from the French,
German, Canadian and Vatican radios to the more influential British and
American stations."
Malcolm
Rutherford in the Financial Times: "Michael
Nelson in War of the Black Heavens tells of a
Marc
Fisher in The Washington Post: "In
War of the Black Heavens Michael Nelson, a longtime executive at Reuters,
the British news wire, argues that radio caused the Iron Curtain the
crumble. Full stop. It's an audacious argument ........."
Peter
Preston in The Guardian: "The
old Reuter's hand, Michael Nelson, has just published a terrific book
charting how steam radio - the spoken word - undermined autocracy in
Eastern Europe."
Gary
D. Rawnsley in Intelligence and National Security: "This
is an absorbing and informative book, well researched and elegantly
written. It repays reading, both by the novice and by those already
familiar with the subject. It deserves a wide audience." Edward
E. Ericson in Books & Culture: "Nelson,
former general manager of Reuters, the international news agency, focuses
on Western radio's four major 'voices' the British Broadcasting
Corporation, the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty.
His encyclopedic account displays the discernment and balance that one
would expect from a good newsman located nearby but not within the
institutions whose story he tells." A.R.Cannella
in Choice: "He
whets the appetite for further reading with teasing facts: the Vatican's
coinage of the word 'propaganda'; the extent to which the CIA supported
Radio Free Europe (all but total); attacks by Sen. Joseph McCarthy on the
VOA ........."
Arnold
Beichman in The Washington Times: "Michael
Nelson, former general manager of Reuters, has interviewed onetime members
of the Soviet CP Central Committee who supplied him with documents
attesting to the tremendous role - buttressed by Lech Walesa's evaluation
- Western radio broadcasts played in the most crucial battle of ideas in
the 20th century." Jon
Elliston in Dossier: Covert Ops and Secret Documents: "Whether
or not you buy into Nelson's thesis, War of the Black Heavens is
indispensable reading for Cold War history buffs." It is also
"packed with stories from the cloak and dagger side of propaganda
wars." James
Schwoch in The Journal of American History: "Specialists
in such areas as media history and propaganda studies will find this book
an essential addition to their collections. By providing a sufficient base
of available evidence to augment his own experiences, contacts and
interviews, Nelson has provided a new model of responsibility for future
inside authors to follow."
Nicholas
J. Cull in Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television: ".........
an engaging, scholarly and elegantly written work, written by a man who as
general manager of Reuters news agency had a unique insight into the
unfolding events of the Cold War."
James
Critchlow in Journal of Cold War Studies: "Nelson's
well-organised book presents a wealth of information in a lively style
accessible to students. He is at home in diplomatic and political
contexts. His bibliography reflects an impressive array of sources,
including Soviet and Western government archives."
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Cartoon
from a book of anti-Western cartoons called A Shattering Blow by Boris
Efimov, Plakat, Moscow, 1985. The caption reads: "Radio Liberty and
Radio Free Europe - These two old toads love croaking loudly. Their base in
an old rubbish bin containing provocations, lies, slander, inventions." Click here to enlarge the image. |