The Cold War
By (Author) J. Gerlach
Microcosm Publishing
Microcosm Publishing
1st February 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
Military history
Nuclear weapons
Political ideologies and movements
Cold wars and proxy conflicts
Pamphlet
48
Width 137mm, Height 102mm
43g
In the latest installment of the Simple History zine series, author J. Gerlach takes a look at the Cold War. An era of nukes and paranoia, witch-hunting and gun-running, the Cold War was a complicated and oft-times terrifying time in our world's history. Says Gerlach in the introduction, "The Cold War is a popular topic of debate for historians because of the large number of 'what-ifs' and the immensity of the consequences should a bluff be called, or an itchy trigger finger released. There seems to have been opportunities, both for an honorable end to the conflict, and for complete world destruction." From the post-war "reconstruction" of Asia and Europe to the Bay of Pigs and Perestroika, Gerlach's book comprises a wide cross-section of the important events of the last 70 years and gives its objective facts in a clear-minded, engaging, accessible fashion.
You got your revolutions, your arms races, your pacts, your treaties and agreements as well as espionge, air lifts, thaws, freezes, police actions, standoffs and stalemates and it all ended when Mr. Reagan asked Mr. Gorbechev to tear down that wall in Berlin. Not quite, but I've heard it spun that way. - Reglar Wiglar
J. Gerlach is a longtime independent researcher and zine writer. He lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.