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The Glass Wall: Lives on the Baltic Frontier
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About This Book
Few countries have suffered more from the convulsions and bloodshed of twentieth-century Europe than those in the eastern Baltic. Caught between the giants of Germany and Russia, on a route across which armies surged or retreated, small nations like Latvia and Estonia were for centuries the subjects of conquests and domination as foreign colonizers claimed control of the territory and its inhabitants, along with their religion, government, and culture.The Glass Wall features an extraordinary cast of characters—contemporary and historical, foreign and indigenous—who have lived and fought in the Baltic, western Europe's easternmost stronghold. Too often the destiny of this region has seemed to be serving as the front line in other people's wars. By telling the stories of warriors and victims, of philosophers and Baltic barons, of poets and artists, of rebels and emperors, and of otherswho lived through years of turmoil and violence, Max Egremont sets forth a brilliant account of a long-overlooked region, on a frontier whose limits may still be in doubt.
Reviews
"We hear them echoing through the past in the snatches of bawdy song sung by the peasantry on summer nights while reaping the harvest ..."
"A restlessly enquiring guide, Egremont interviews Latvian and Estonian businessmen, academics and editors, as well as elderly survivors of Hitler's war against Riga's Jewry ..."
"The narrative sometimes meanders, but the book contains a helpful gazetteer and chronology."
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