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Book reviews for "Pozner,_Vladimir" sorted by average review score:
Parting With Illusions
Published in Hardcover by Atlantic Monthly Press (1990)
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On The Mark
A Masterpiece
A truly excepional book and my all time favorite... An incredibly personal account of an extraordinary life of a true citizen of the world ... along with an insightful look into the drama of modern Russian history.
Pozner talks about his childhood, his parents, first glass of vodka and his first love, his marriages, career, spiritual and political struggles...
Plus a personal account of WWII, Stalin's purges, the Thaw, the Iron Curtain and Perestroika.
Pozner talks about his childhood, his parents, first glass of vodka and his first love, his marriages, career, spiritual and political struggles...
Plus a personal account of WWII, Stalin's purges, the Thaw, the Iron Curtain and Perestroika.
Eye opening
This book was a present to me when I was a senior in college and what a gift it was! The Russians often painted as the cold number one enemy came to be just as human as anyone. The author's struggle between being a journalist in a communist country certainly makes me, a journalist in a world that protects free speech, feel very humbled and fortunate.
It's humanity's greatest test when one is forced to question your own country's integrity. Yet the author has succeeded in standing by his principles. Extremely educational (and easy reading for students) for those who are not familiar with Russian history and diplomacy. It's been years since I read it and I look forward to picking it up again.
Eyewitness: A Personal Account of the Unraveling of the Soviet Union
Published in Hardcover by Random House (1992)
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A good story badly told
Pozner was a prominent journalist at the time of the coup that ousted Gorbachev and he gives a good account of the events of those days on the barricades, but he has a tendency to engage in far too many flashbacks and always at the most inoportune moments. If he had stuck with a linear narrative, and left out about half of the tongue twisting names (you'll need an Excel spreadsheet to keep all the minor players straight), it could have been an excellent book.
Descente aux enfers : récits de déportés et de S.S. d'Auschwitz
Published in Unknown Binding by Julliard ()
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Eyewitness
Published in Hardcover by Random House (1992)
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Le fond des ormes : roman
Published in Unknown Binding by Actes Sud ; Diffusion PUF ()
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Les brumes de San Francisco : roman
Published in Unknown Binding by Actes sud ()
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Remembering War: A U.S.-Soviet Dialogue
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (1990)
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Vladimir Pozner se souvient
Published in Unknown Binding by Messidor ()
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I read this book when it first came out and went over it again recently, 14 years later, finding it in an old box of mine. His writings prove that he had good instincts on where his nation and culture, and the world was heading at the time he wrote "Parting with Illusion." He has the oration and writing ability to explain his viewpoints as well as the perceptions of many Russians when he wrote this book in 1989. He discussed Stalin and his legacy, and the graft and corruption that crept into the USSR, becoming commonplace by the 1960s.
Now, 14 years later, I wonder: where is Vladimir Pozner? I haven't heard or seen him since the late 1980s or perhaps early 90s.
At the time, he was articulate, and an astute observer of current affairs. Possessing a gifted knack for passing his observations on.
Today, in 2003, where is he now?