April 26th, 2024
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Available 4.15.24


Prague Winter by Madeleine Albright

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Also by Madeleine Albright:

Prague Winter, May 2012
Hardcover / e-Book
Read My Pins, October 2009
Hardcover
Memo to the President Elect, January 2008
Hardcover
The Mighty and the Almighty, April 2007
Paperback
Women Empowered, March 2007
Hardcover
The Mighty and the Almighty, May 2006
Hardcover
Madam Secretary: A Memoir, April 2005
Paperback

Also by Madeleine Korbel Albright:

Prague Winter, May 2012
Hardcover / e-Book

Prague Winter
Madeleine Albright, Madeleine Korbel Albright

A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948

Harper
May 2012
On Sale: April 24, 2012
Featuring: Madeline Albright
480 pages
ISBN: 0062030310
EAN: 9780062030313
Kindle: B00655U5ZO
Hardcover / e-Book
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Non-Fiction Memoir

Before Madeleine Albright turned twelve, her life was shaken by the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia—the country where she was born—the Battle of Britain, the near total destruction of European Jewry, the Allied victory in World War II, the rise of communism, and the onset of the Cold War.

Albright's experiences, and those of her family, provide a lens through which to view the most tumultuous dozen years in modern history. Drawing on her memory, her parents' written reflections, interviews with contemporaries, and newly available documents, Albright recounts a tale that is by turns harrowing and inspiring. Prague Winter is an exploration of the past with timeless dilemmas in mind and, simultaneously, a journey with universal lessons that is intensely personal.

The book takes readers from the Bohemian capital's thousand-year-old castle to the bomb shelters of London, from the desolate prison ghetto of TerezÍn to the highest councils of European and American government. Albright reflects on her discovery of her family's Jewish heritage many decades after the war, on her Czech homeland's tangled history, and on the stark moral choices faced by her parents and their generation. Often relying on eyewitness descriptions, she tells the story of how millions of ordinary citizens were ripped from familiar surroundings and forced into new roles as exiled leaders and freedom fighters, resistance organizers and collaborators, victims and killers. These events of enormous complexity are nevertheless shaped by concepts familiar to any growing child: fear, trust, adaptation, the search for identity, the pressure to conform, the quest for independence, and the difference between right and wrong.

"No one who lived through the years of 1937 to 1948," Albright writes, "was a stranger to profound sadness. Millions of innocents did not survive, and their deaths must never be forgotten. Today we lack the power to reclaim lost lives, but we have a duty to learn all that we can about what happened and why." At once a deeply personal memoir and an incisive work of history, Prague Winter serves as a guide to the future through the lessons of the past—as seen through the eyes of one of the international community's most respected and fascinating figures.

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