Selected Product: | Cold War Hot: Alternative Decisions of the Cold War Hardcover Author: Peter Tsouras Publisher: Greenhill Books Release Date: April 2003 ISBN-10: 185367530X ISBN-13: 9781853675300 List Price: £25.00 Average Customer Rating: | | 1945 ISBN-10: 0345494792 The Moscow Option: An Alternative Second World War ISBN-10: 1853676748 Hitler Triumphant: Alternate Decisions of World War II ISBN-10: 1853676993 Battle of the Bulge: Hitler's Alternate Scenarios ISBN-10: 1853676071 1862: A Novel ISBN-10: 0345482379 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Cold War Hot: Alternative Decisions of the Cold War by Peter Tsouras (ISBN-10: 185367530X, ISBN-13: 9781853675300). At this time we have not yet written a review for Cold War Hot: Alternative Decisions of the Cold War by Peter Tsouras (ISBN-10: 185367530X, ISBN-13: 9781853675300). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Cold War Not So Hot | Customer Rating: | I'm a big fan of alternative history titles, in particular those supposedly written as text books after the event. Cold War Hot, however, proved to be one of the most disappointing I have read. The premise is pretty straight forwards - how the Cold War could have turned out differently - but this appears to have generated pretty uninspired scenarios. Starting chronilogicaly the first 'event' considered is an exchange between Western fighter escorts and Soviet aircraft during the Berlin airlift, which results in the USAF pasting the Russians. Later chapters consider Soviet/US hostilities in Med, resulting in the US giving the eastern block a sounder thrashing than it recieved (notice the pattern forming here?). Things also get pretty outrageous - a Soviet cruiser is effectively knocked out by a F4 launched Sidewinder air-to-air missile! Why then 3, not 1 star? For me the work is almost worth it for the Quebec sepratist scenario which, in my opinion, is what alternative history should be all about: well researched, plausible (read the authors notes) and reaches its goal without too much suspension of disbelief. Incidently this is also one of the few scenarios which actually appears to signifcantly affect the course of the cold war (in the others, things tend to return to the historical path so have little real impact. The exception is the Invasion of North Vietnam scenario although as the author states this results in North-South Korea situation should this be classed, as argued, a US victory?). All in all a missed opportunity - try 'What If' or the 'Hitler Options' first - but one for students of Cold War politics rather alternative history. |
|