Zbig: The Life of Zbigniew Brzezinski, America's Cold War Prophet
By (Author) Edward Luce
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2nd September 2025
13th May 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: historical, political and military
355.033073092
Hardback
560
Width 160mm, Height 238mm, Spine 56mm
840g
'For anyone who wants to understand the history of America and the world, this is a useful and important book' ANNE APPLEBAUM
'A biographer of genius ... One of the sharpest political pens of our day' WILLIAM DALRYMPLE
'A towering achievement. A book which is founded on deep scholarship, yet so accessible and readable from the very beginning that it feels more like a historical detective story' RAGEH OMAAR
Zbigniew Brzezinski was a political strategist who rose to prominence as an intellectual architect of US foreign policy during the Cold War. As National Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter and a trusted advisor to US presidents from John F. Kennedy onwards, Brzezinskis expertise helped shape global strategy at critical moments - most significantly as a key figure in the downfall of the Soviet Union.
A Polish migr who witnessed the devastation of his homeland during both Nazi and Soviet occupations, Brzezinski became one of the Wests foremost scholars of totalitarianism. His nuanced understanding of the importance of speaking the enemys language, coupled with his close friendship with Pope John Paul II was instrumental in preventing a Soviet invasion of Poland. While Nixon and Kissinger, his lifelong rival, famously opened China to the West in the early 1970s, it was Brzezinski and Carter who strengthened US-China relations, further shifting the global balance of power away from Moscow. Beyond the Cold War, Brzezinski continued to influence foreign policy, notably in shaping the nations response to the 9/11 attacks. Yet his legacy remains underreported, leaving gaps in our understanding of Cold War history and its aftermath.
Edward Luce, celebrated columnist and political writer, restores Brzezinskis rightful place in history. Through a sweeping narrative that spans much of the 20th century, Zbig offers a gripping account of Brzezinskis life and, in doing so, narrates a compelling re-examination of the end of the Cold War.
Zbig is a magnificent and highly readable chronicle of the life and times of one of the most important American strategists of the 20th century, written with an appreciative eye for both the man and the politics of the time he helped to shape -- Francis Fukuyama, author of LIBERALISM AND ITS DISCONTENTS
This is the best book ever written about a national security advisor. Its also by far the best biography on Brzezinski a towering figure in American foreign policy -- David Rubenstein, author of THE HIGHEST CALLING
With Zbig, Edward Luce, one of the sharpest political pens of our day, has shown himself to be, in addition, a biographer of genius -- William Dalrymple, bestselling author of THE GOLDEN ROAD
One of the great US strategists of the Cold War and its aftermath. He proved prescient in his fear that the US and Europe would squander the opportunity presented by the fall of communism to build a new world order. In Vladimir Putin, he recognised the Wests Nemesis earlier than almost anyone else. Ed Luces meticulous and engaging biography is beautifully balanced. He leaves you in no doubt how desperately we lack the new generation of geopolitical strategic thinkers who can boast Zbigs acuity and prescience -- Misha Glenny, author of McMAFIA
A brilliant architect of the American Century, Zbigniew Brzezinski deserves a brilliant biography, and Ed Luce has given us just that: a sensitive, deeply researched and fair-minded portrait of a man who had a remarkable journey and has left America, and the world, the most significant of legacies -- Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author
Ed Luce's Zbig is not only the definitive biography of Zbigniew Brzezinski, a crucial figure in the history of the Cold War, but also a book with real insights into the nature of power - especially the ways in which intellectual valour and good faith can come into conflict with the ugly realities of the world. For anyone who wants to understand the history of America and the world, this is a useful and important book -- Anne Applebaum, author of AUTOCRACY, INC
Zbig is a brilliant study of an American statesman, a compelling biography of both a man and a moment, the beginning of the end of the Cold War. What Kissinger, his friend and rival, was to Republicans in the 1970s, Brzezinski was to the Democrats a formidable intellect and advocate who saw the Soviet threat more clearly than most in the upper echelons of power in Washington. This is history that matters more than ever today, given the resurgent threat from Russia, powerfully rendered by the great Ed Luce -- Susan Glasser, co-author of THE MAN WHO RAN WASHINGTON and THE DIVIDER
Zbig is an astonishing biography that will change the way history looks at Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Cold War. Drawing on Brzezinskis previously secret personal diaries, Luce shows the reader how this brilliant Polish-American foresaw the coming decline of the Soviet Union and used every tool of American policy to make sure it happened. Luce explains how time after time Brzezinski got the big issues right from Russia and China and the Middle East. But hes also searingly honest about Brzezinski's flaws his intellectual arrogance and sometimes ruthless ambition. Through Brzezinski's life, he was constantly compared to his migr intellectual twin, Henry Kissinger. Readers of this book will likely conclude that Zbig was the true visionary -- David Ignatius, New York Times bestselling author
A towering achievement. A book which vividly captures the life of one the worlds foreign policy titans of the last 60 years. Founded on deep scholarship, yet so accessible and readable from the very beginning that it feels more like a historical detective story. Luce meticulously records how over decades Brzezinski refused to go along with the conventions of Washingtons political salons and how his granite hard determination forged a strategic vision of Americas challenge to authoritarianism around the world and principally the Soviet Union -- Rageh Omaar
Edward Luce is the Financial Timess chief US commentator and columnist. He is the author of three acclaimed books: The Retreat of Western Liberalism (2017), Time to Start Thinking: America in the Age of Descent (2012) and In Spite of the Gods: The Strange Rise of Modern India (2007). He appears regularly on CNN, NPR, MSNBCs Morning Joe and the BBC. He lives in Washington, DC.