The Ideal Man
Autor Joshua Kurlantzicken Limba Engleză Hardback – noi 2011
| Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
|---|---|---|
| Paperback (1) | 86.72 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
| Wiley – 31 oct 2010 | 86.72 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
| Hardback (1) | 139.17 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
| Turner Publishing Company – noi 2011 | 139.17 lei 3-5 săpt. |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780470086216
ISBN-10: 0470086211
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 167 x 244 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: Turner Publishing Company
Locul publicării:Hoboken, United States
ISBN-10: 0470086211
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 167 x 244 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: Turner Publishing Company
Locul publicării:Hoboken, United States
Public țintă
History readers are always looking for an exciting narrative that puts our current world problems in perspective, especially books that involve spies or mistakes we’re still paying the price for today. While CIA buffs will find much here to like, the core audience will be the people drawn to books like Fordlandia or All the Shah’s Men.Descriere
Praise for The Ideal Man "Joshua Kurlantzick has written a sad, evocative tale of an American voyager who conquers a strange land only to be lost in it, caught between cultures and his own demons. The Ideal Man will appeal to readers of Graham Greene and The Ugly American, but it′s also a timeless story of innocence and knowing too much." — Evan Thomas, author of Sea of Thunder and The War Lovers "Here is a more troubled and troubling Jim Thompson than we have previously encountered: the silk king enters the heart of darkness. After narrating the ultimate Asia hand′s unrequited love affair with Thailand, this remarkable book makes Thompson′s legendary and still unsolved disappearance at the height of the Cold War seem almost inevitable." — Duncan McCargo, author of Tearing Apart the Land "Woven throughout Kurlantzick′s biography of Our Man in Thailand is an essential question for our times: When Washington goes on ideological rampages overseas, running wars that trample on the aspirations of the local people, no matter how hard those aspirations may be for outsiders to discern, don′t these wars tend to boomerang? Doesn′t cultural clumsiness undercut military power every time? Kurlantzick′s glamorous protagonist, the ′silk king′ Jim Thompson, saw American anticommunism wreak such havoc in Southeast Asia that it helped give rise to a later communist victory. This fascinating book will leave you wondering how often this pattern is going to be repeated, on large and small scales, in the Middle East, Afghanistan, and beyond." — Roger Warner, author of Shooting at the Moon: The Story of America′s Clandestine War in Laos
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Praise for "The Ideal Man"
"Joshua Kurlantzick has written a sad, evocative tale of an American voyager who conquers a strange land only to be lost in it, caught between cultures and his own demons. "The Ideal Man" will appeal to readers of Graham Greene and The Ugly American, but it's also a timeless story of innocence and knowing too much."
--Evan Thomas, author of "Sea of Thunder" and "The War Lovers"
"Here is a more troubled and troubling Jim Thompson than we have previously encountered: the silk king enters the heart of darkness. After narrating the ultimate Asia hand's unrequited love affair with Thailand, this remarkable book makes Thompson's legendary and still unsolved disappearance at the height of the Cold War seem almost inevitable."
--Duncan McCargo, author of "Tearing Apart the Land"
"Woven throughout Kurlantzick's biography of Our Man in Thailand is an essential question for our times: When Washington goes on ideological rampages overseas, running wars that trample on the aspirations of the local people, no matter how hard those aspirations may be for outsiders to discern, don't these wars tend to boomerang? Doesn't cultural clumsiness undercut military power every time? Kurlantzick's glamorous protagonist, the 'silk king' Jim Thompson, saw American anticommunism wreak such havoc in Southeast Asia that it helped give rise to a later communist victory. This fascinating book will leave you wondering how often this pattern is going to be repeated, on large and small scales, in the Middle East, Afghanistan, and beyond."
--Roger Warner, author of "Shooting at the Moon: The Story of America's Clandestine War in Laos"
--Evan Thomas, author of "Sea of Thunder" and "The War Lovers"
"Here is a more troubled and troubling Jim Thompson than we have previously encountered: the silk king enters the heart of darkness. After narrating the ultimate Asia hand's unrequited love affair with Thailand, this remarkable book makes Thompson's legendary and still unsolved disappearance at the height of the Cold War seem almost inevitable."
--Duncan McCargo, author of "Tearing Apart the Land"
"Woven throughout Kurlantzick's biography of Our Man in Thailand is an essential question for our times: When Washington goes on ideological rampages overseas, running wars that trample on the aspirations of the local people, no matter how hard those aspirations may be for outsiders to discern, don't these wars tend to boomerang? Doesn't cultural clumsiness undercut military power every time? Kurlantzick's glamorous protagonist, the 'silk king' Jim Thompson, saw American anticommunism wreak such havoc in Southeast Asia that it helped give rise to a later communist victory. This fascinating book will leave you wondering how often this pattern is going to be repeated, on large and small scales, in the Middle East, Afghanistan, and beyond."
--Roger Warner, author of "Shooting at the Moon: The Story of America's Clandestine War in Laos"
Cuprins
Preface v Chapter 1 1 Chapter 2 11 Chapter 3 21 Chapter 4 29 Chapter 5 43 Chapter 6 55 Chapter 7 67 Chapter 8 83 Chapter 9 99 Chapter 10 117 Chapter 11 131 Chapter 12 149 Chapter 13 161 Chapter 14 171 Chapter 15 181 Chapter 16 195 Epilogue 209 Acknowledgments 221 Notes 225 Index 255
Notă biografică
JOSHUA KURLANTZICK writes regularly about Asia for Newsweek and the New Republic . He also contributes to Mother Jones , the London Review of Books , the New York Times , Foreign Policy , the Atlantic , and Time . In 2007, Yale University Press published his book on China′s soft power, Charm Offensive .