A Fiery Peace in a Cold War: Bernard Schriever and the Ultimate Weapon by Neil Sheehan

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2009
  • 560pp
  • Sales Rank: 4,053

Reader Rating: (5 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2009
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 560pp
    • Sales Rank: 4,053

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    Nikita Khrushchev's Cuban gamble in 1962 was a product of the huge imbalance of nuclear weapon capability between the Cold War's adversaries. In that year the Soviet Union had a mere 20 unreliable intercontinental ballistic missiles compared to the U.S. arsenal of 150 ICBMs, 100 intermediate-range ballistic missiles located in Europe and Turkey, and 50 submarine-launched Polaris missiles. The Soviet Union had 58 Bison jet bombers, restricted to a one-way, Russia-to-America range, and 76 ponderous Tupolev turboprop bombers that were sitting ducks for American fighters and surface-to-air missiles. The U.S. had a fleet of nearly 2,000 heavy bombers which could drop their nuclear weapons on any point in Russia and then fly home again.

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    Synopsis

    From Neil Sheehan, author of the Pulitzer Prize—winning classic A Bright Shining Lie, comes this long-awaited, magnificent epic. Here is the never-before-told story of the nuclear arms race that changed history–and of the visionary American Air Force officer Bernard Schriever, who led the high-stakes effort. A Fiery Peace in a Cold War is a masterly work about Schriever’s quests to prevent the Soviet Union from acquiring nuclear superiority, to penetrate and exploit space for America, and to build the first weapons meant to deter an atomic holocaust rather than to be fired in anger.

    Sheehan melds biography and history, politics and science, to create a sweeping narrative that transports the reader back and forth from individual drama to world stage. The narrative takes us from Schriever’s boyhood in Texas as a six-year-old immigrant from Germany in 1917 through his apprenticeship in the open-cockpit biplanes of the Army Air Corps in the 1930s and his...

    The Washington Post - Michael Dobbs

    Sheehan does an excellent job of describing, in terms that a layman can follow, the technical challenges involved in developing an ICBM and how they were overcome…Sheehan is also good at tracing the origins of the military industrial lobby and the twisting of intelligence for political (and commercial) purposes.

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    Biography

    Neil Sheehan is the author of A Bright Shining Lie, which won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction in 1989. He spent three years in Vietnam as a war correspondent for United Press International and The New York Times and won numerous awards for his reporting. In 1971, he obtained the Pentagon Papers, which brought the Times the Pulitzer Prize Gold Medal for meritorious public service.

    Customer Reviews

    Definitive Book for About Nuclear Missle History and Development by a master writer.by Anonymous

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    January 04, 2010: Neil Sheehan does it again -- like his award winning "Bright Shining Lie" -- the definitive book about the Vietnam War -- "A Fiery Peace" is the definitive book about the history and development of the nuclear missle arsenals during the cold war. Neil Sheehan has to rank at the top amongst investigative-reporters and writers in the field of journalisim.

    The audio book is a must for anyone wanting to understand the present day world of mutual assured destruction posed by nuclear missles and the prolifieration of nuclear weaponry.

    Bernard Schriever and Dwight E. Eisenhower, unknown and known leaders with essential contributions tby Tybee_Tom

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    December 12, 2009: Neil Sheehan writes a marvelous history of the Cold War through the prism of Air Force General Bernard Schriever's unknown but utterly essential career. As Sheehan shines a light on this previously little known Air Force officer and his astounding contributions, he sets this person's efforts in the context of the US-Soviet Union Cold War. Sheehan depicts these nations as gigantic mastadons flailing at each other in joint incomprehension, both afflicted with bluster, fear, and ignorance. As Sheehan lays out the path to the ICBM, one is struck by the incredible application of brain power and resources used in developing this engineering marvel. One is also struck by the lack of a similar intelligence effort against the Soviet Union as the US raced against the Soviets to develop the first operational ICBM. The answer to that failure is not answered, but suggested by the financial rewards this national effort made possible to the emerging military-industrial complex. The rewards were for building a rocket, not for seeing if the opposition was truly as dangerous as he was made out to be. President Eisenhower emerges as a hero of the Republic, with his unique combination of military experience and profound scepticism of the emergening military-industrial complex. By the end of the book, the reader admires Schreiver for getting the US to the goal of an ICBM, and Eisenhower for understanding the potential costs of that goal. In this book, Sheehan has crafted a compelling account of post-WW II America as it accepts world leadership, and the individual qualities of two men whose contributions were crucial for us to reach the world we live in today.


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