No American statesman has been as revered and as reviled as Henry Kissinger.
Hailed by some as the "indispensable man", whose advice has been sought by every
president from John F. Kennedy to George W. Bush, Kissinger has also attracted
immense hostility from critics who have cast him as an amoral Machiavellian -
the ultimate cold-blooded "realist". In this remarkable new book, the first of two volumes, Niall Ferguson has
created an extraordinary panorama of Kissinger's world, and a paradigm-shifting
reappraisal of the man. Only through knowledge of Kissinger's early life (as a
Jew in Hitler's Germany, a poor immigrant in New York, a GI at the Battle of the
Bulge, an interrogator of Nazis, and a student of history at Harvard) can we
understand his debt to the philosophy of idealism. And only by tracing his rise, fall and revival as an adviser to Kennedy, Nelson
Rockefeller and, finally, Richard Nixon can we appreciate the magnitude of his
contribution to the theory of diplomacy, grand strategy and nuclear deterrence. Drawing not only on Kissinger's hitherto closed private papers but also on
documents from more than a hundred archives around the world, this biography is
Niall Ferguson's masterpiece. Like his classic two-volume history of the House
of Rothschild, Kissinger sheds dazzling new light on an entire era.