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Book reviews for "Petrov,_Vladimir" sorted by average review score:

Escape from the Future: The Incredible Adventures of a Young Russian
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (1973)
Author: Vladimir Petrov
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You will love this book!
I have many personal feelings about this book, which I have read at least 3 times. I grew up with and am best friends with his youngest son and met Mr. Petrov countless times. On many occassions I had the unique priviledge of being able to discuss his book and the events which took place with the author in person. Still, had I never met Mr. Petrov, I am sure I would not have enjoyed this book any less. This book ranks with such books as 'Papillon', and 'To Live and Die in Shanghai', as one of the greatest true life prison stories ever told. Calling the ordeals that Mr. Petrov survived 'Kafkaesque' is an understatement. If you can find a copy of this book, I guarantee you will be forever satisfied.

A Great Collection For Any Library
This is the collection of tales edited by Stith Thompson, one half of the team responsible for the Stith-Thompson classification system of folktales. Thompson pulls tales mostly from European sources and includes source and classification notes in the appendix. The tales are classics or often derivatives of well-known tales. They are also suitable for all ages. I have had this book for years and still pull it off my shelf on a regular basis.


The Petrov Affair: Politics and Espionage
Published in Hardcover by Australian Natl Univ Pr (1987)
Author: Robert Manne
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Australia's greatest spy saga
In 1954 the Australian Labour Party seemed poised for electoral victory. Just before the election the senior KGB officer in the Soviet Embassy defected to Australian authorities. A short time after his defection armed Soviet Body Guards tried to take his wife back to Russia but were stopped from doing so at the Darwin airport. Photos of a distressed Mrs Petrov being dragged across the airport tarmac by two Soviet Goons hit the front pages of all major newspapers.

Petrov?s defection was one of the more significant defections of Soviet Agents in the post war period. Amongst the documents he brought with him two caused fireworks. One was a briefing that had been prepared for the Soviets by an employee of the Labour Opposition. Another was a document prepared by a leading journalist.

The conservative Prime Minister Menzies who had seemed poised for certain defeat immediately established a Royal Commission into Communism in Australia. The existence of documents prepared in the office of the leader of the opposition was a tremendous embarrassment. In the following election Menzies was able to win.

These events became known as the Petrov affair. The loss of the 1954 election led to the Labour leader Evatt having what was probably some form of mental collapse. He from this point made a series of errors of judgement that led to the party splitting and it was out of office for another 18 years.

The fortuitous juxtaposition of the events have led writers on the left to believe that the whole affair was orchestrated by the Liberals for their short term political advantage. Manne has gone through all the sources, some of which at the time of writing had just come into the public domain.

His book is a convincing argument for the fact that no conspiracy existed. Rather Menzies simply capitalised on chance events that occurred in a miraculous way to get him out of a deep political hole.

Manne?s argument is convincing. The book itself is reasonably amusing. Petrov himself was a chronic alcoholic and it seems clear that he was one of the more incompetent KGB operatives to be let loose on the Western World. Despite his incompetence he was able to provide the Australian secret service with an account of what had happened in the past when KGB operatives womanised and drank less, and as a result could do some work. The political events around the affair have meant that most Australians have never released that the defection was in fact of some importance apart from what it did to destroy the electoral fortunes of the Australian Labour Party.


Bank semian v pochvakh lesnykh fitotsenozov evropeiskoi chasti SSSR
Published in Unknown Binding by Izd-vo Moskovskogo universiteta ()
Author: Vladimir Vladimirovich Petrov
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The Commander
Published in Hardcover by Brasseys, Inc. (1987)
Author: Vladimir Vasil' Evich Karpov
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Information and Creation: Integrating the "Two Cultures"
Published in Hardcover by Springer Verlag (1995)
Authors: German A. Golitsyn and Vladimir M. Petrov
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Nest of traitors : the Petrov affair
Published in Unknown Binding by Jacaranda ()
Author: Nicholas Whitlam
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The Petrov Affair
Published in Paperback by Pergamon Press (1987)
Author: R. Manne
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Sloboda : povest§, rasskazy
Published in Unknown Binding by ëTìSentr.-Chernozemnoe knizhnoe izd-vo ()
Author: Vladimir Petrov
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Truth will out : ASIO and the Petrovs
Published in Unknown Binding by Collins ()
Author: Michael Thwaites
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U.S.-Soviet detente, past and future
Published in Unknown Binding by American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research ()
Author: Vladimir Petrov
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