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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A deep understanding of the past and future,
By Christian Jacobsen (Seattle and Budapest) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Milosevic: A Biography (Hardcover)
The disintegration of Yugoslavia into a horrible series of wars and battles that pitted formerly peaceful neighbors against each other is a very important part of modern European history. It tested the relationship between America and Europe on all levels. And it was where the strengths and weaknesses of the NATO alliance have been most clearly illustrated.Getting your head around this incredibly complex situation can only be done by examining the man who methodically tore a once-proud country and people to shreds: Slobodan Milosevic. How was this drab functionary able to completely destroy a prosperous nation? How was he able to create civil wars between villagers that had lived peacefully side by side for generations? Why was he supported and even admired by the Western politicians while simultaneously overseeing some of the worst atrocities against humans since WWII? Through interviews with all of the key figures that surrounded Milosevic - including his wife Mira Markovic! - Adam LeBor paints a vivid picture of the man at the center of this terrible tragedy. As a reporter in the Balkans during the wars, Mr. LeBor saw first hand the results of Milosevic's terrible reign. As a proven history writer, he has managed to take his first hand experiences and meld them with historical perspective, so we wind up with an incredibly sharp picture of the key events themselves, but framed within an understanding of the event in the overall historical narrative. This book is the only work I have seen that makes the Balkans understandable to the common Westerner, and is important for that very reason. However, it also resonates particularly clearly in the world we live in post 9/11, where we again are partnered with NATO and involved in wars in foreign lands with tribal people in a land and culture that are driven by a web of beliefs and interconnectedness that we do not understand. Read this book to understand what the world lost when Yugoslavia disintegrated, and how it happened. And read this book to gain an understanding and insight into our current conflicts. And finally, read this book for Mr. LeBor's skill at writing. You will not be disappointed.
4 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
"I never met Slobodan Milosevic, although I wrote a biography of him.",
By Richard Murray (Washington State) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Milosevic: A Biography (Hardcover)
The author's admission to the press that "I never met Slobodan Milosevic, although I wrote a biography of him" sums up the credibility of this book.
LeBor misleads readers throughout his book. When describing Milosevic's ascent to power (pg. 79-84) he says that a crowd of unruly Serbs attacked a predominantly Albanian police force in Kosovo Polje in 1987. LeBor claims that Milosevic took the crowd's side and said, "No one should dare to beat you again!" LeBor relies heavily on his version of events to advance his thesis that Milosevic incited Serbian nationalism in order to attain power. The only problem is that LeBor's version of events is totally wrong. As the events unfolded in 1987 The New York Times reported that THE POLICE ATTACKED THE CROWD in a botched attempt to clear the area of demonstrators -- and that the crowd RETALIATED by throwing rocks at the police. LeBor's assertion that the police were attacked by the crowd is made even more laughable by the fact that the federal Yugoslav Interior Ministry scolded the policemen involved in the incident for their conduct. On top of getting the fact that the police attacked the crowd wrong, LeBor misquoted Milosevic whose actual words were "you will not be beaten" given in response to complaints from the crowd that the police were beating people. This is all easy enough to verify because there's a videotape of the event. It was broadcast on TV when it happened in 1987, and it's a publicly accessible exhibit from Milosevic's trial at The Hague. I personally suspect that LeBor's 180 degree inversion of established fact and his misquotation of Milosevic's words was a deliberate attempt to mislead his readers, but even if it wasn't malicious it's still proof that LeBor's research was sloppy. I'm not going to write a refutation of the entire book here; suffice it to say that the example I gave above is one of many that I could have used.
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