Antony Beevor

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Antony Beevor (born on December 14 1946) is a British historian, educated at Winchester College and Sandhurst and studied under the famous historian of World War II, John Keegan. Beevor is a former officer with the 11th Hussars, who has published several popular histories on the Second World War.

He is a Visiting Professor at the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is descended from a long line of women writers, being a son of Carinthia "Kinta" Beevor (1911- August 1995), herself the daughter of Lina Wakefield, and a descendant of Lucie Duff-Gordon (author of a travelogue on Egypt). Kinta Beevor wrote A Tuscan Childhood. Antony Beevor is married to Hon. Artemis Cooper, granddaughter of Lady Diana Cooper.

His best known works, the bestselling Stalingrad and Berlin - The Downfall 1945 recount the WWII battles between Russia and Germany. They have been praised for their vivid, compelling style, and the use of newly disclosed documents from Soviet archives. [1] [2] [3] His books discuss atrocities committed by both sides, but are especially notable for extensive coverage of the less-studied crimes committed by the Soviet Red Army in occupied German territory, including looting and the rape of several million women.

Criticism

Berlin - The Downfall 1945 has encountered strong criticism in Russia, where WWII is considered the "Great Patriotic War."[4] The Russian ambassador to the UK denounced the book as "lies" and "slander against the people who saved the world from Nazism."[5] O.A. Rzhevsky, a professor and President of the Russian Association of WWII Historians, has charged that Beevor is merely resurrecting the discredited and racist views of neo-Nazi historians, who depicted Soviet troops as subhuman "Asiatic hordes." [6]

Published works

He has had four novels published:

  • Violent Brink, (first published John Murray, London, 1975);
  • The Faustian Pact, (Jonathan Cape, London1983);
  • For Reasons of State, (Jonathan Cape London, 1980);
  • The enchantment of Christina von Retzen (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 1989).

His works of published non-fiction include:

  • The Spanish Civil War (first published Orbis, London, 1982);
  • Inside the British Army (Chatto Windus, London, 1990);
  • Crete: The Battle and the Resistance (John Murray, London,1991);
  • Paris After the Liberation, 1944-1949, co-authored with his wife, (1994);
  • Stalingrad (Viking, London, 1998); won the first Samuel Johnson Prize, the Wolfson History Prize and the Hawthornden Prize for Literature in 1999
  • Berlin - The Downfall 1945 (Penguin, London,2002); Published as The Fall of Berlin 1945 in the U.S.
  • The Mystery of Olga Chekhova, (2004).

The books he has edited include:

  • A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945 by Vasily Grossman.

He has also been contributed to several other books including:

  • The British Army, Manpower and Society into the Twenty-First Century, ed by Hew Strachan
  • What Ifs? of American History: Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been, by Robert Cowley (Editor), Antony Beevor and Caleb Carr. (2003)

External links

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