30-Day No-Hassle Returns
We guarantee your satisfaction on every purchase or rental with a full refund within 30 days of your purchase date.
Fast, Same-Day Customer Service
If you need help, our friendly, helpful Customer Service team will contact you the same business day.
The Best Prices on Textbook Rentals, Guaranteed
You can shop with confidence with the best rental prices at ValoreBooks.com. If you find a lower priced rental, we will match it.

How the Cold War Began

by

Knight, Amy

$2.38 $3.95 Shipping
List Price
$15.95
Discount
85%off
You Save
$13.57
Item Details
Condition: Used - Like New Seller: Rating: (81) 86% Ships From: Multiple Locations Shipping: Standard Comments: Ships Fast. All standard orders delivered within 5 to 12 business days. May have a remainder mark
Marketplace Prices
3 Usedfrom $2.38
3 Newfrom $3.12
How the Cold War Began, ISBN 9780786719389 Own This Book? Sell It
ISBN-13:

9780786719389

ISBN:

0786719389

Pub Date: 2007
Publisher: Basic Books Summary: Just weeks after World War II had ended, a young cipher clerk named Igor Gouzenko walked out of the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa with secret papers stuffed under his shirt and headed straight for the offices of a city newspaper. His action would change the course of the twentieth century. Gouzenko's defection sent shockwaves through Washington, London, Moscow, and Ottawa. It was the first from a Soviet Embassy, and the s [read more]
THE EXTRA MILE GUARANTEE
  • 30-Day No-Hassle Returns
  • Fast, Same-Day Customer Service
  • The Best Prices on Textbook Rentals
Read More
NEED HELP PAYING FOR COLLEGE?
  • Find student loan options quickly and easily
  • Compare loans to find the best fit for you
  • Apply for the loan that meets your needs
Find Loan
Price + Shipping
Condition
Details
Recommended
$8.50
+ $3.95 shipping
New
QUANTITY

2 In-Stock
$2.38
+ $3.95 shipping
LOW ITEM PRICE
Used
Like New
QUANTITY

1 In-Stock
$6.73
+ $3.95 shipping
Used
Like New
QUANTITY

1 In-Stock
$14.12
+ $3.95 shipping
Used
Like New
  • Seller: Super Book Deals
  • Seller Rating: (867) 81%
  • Ships from: Multiple Locations
  • Shipping Methods: Standard
  • Comments: Please allow 4-14 business days for Media Mail delivery. Brand New, Perfect Condition, 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served
  • Contact seller about this item
QUANTITY

99+ In-Stock
$3.12
+ $3.95 shipping
New
QUANTITY

1 In-Stock
$8.50
+ $3.95 shipping
New
QUANTITY

2 In-Stock
$14.12
+ $3.95 shipping
New
  • Seller: Super Book Deals
  • Seller Rating: (867) 81%
  • Ships from: Multiple Locations
  • Shipping Methods: Standard
  • Comments: Please allow 4-14 business days for Media Mail delivery. Brand New, Perfect Condition, 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served
  • Contact seller about this item
QUANTITY

99+ In-Stock
Product Details
ISBN-13:

9780786719389


ISBN:

0786719389


Pub Date: 2007
Publisher: Basic Books

Just weeks after World War II had ended, a young cipher clerk named Igor Gouzenko walked out of the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa with secret papers stuffed under his shirt and headed straight for the offices of a city newspaper. His action would change the course of the twentieth century. Gouzenko's defection sent shockwaves through Washington, London, Moscow, and Ottawa. It was the first from a Soviet Embassy, and the smuggled documents, which suggested that agents in North America were feeding atomic secrets to Moscow, sparked a witch-hunt for spies, including not only Americans and Canadians, but a leading British nuclear scientist, Allan Nunn May. FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover used Gouzenko's defection to demonize the Soviets and discredit the leftists in President Harry Truman's White House. All he had needed to push his agenda was evidence of spying, and Gouzenko delivered the goods. The FBI and the House Un-American Activities Committee used Gouzenko's revelations to go after Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter White, and many others. And all the while, infamous MI-5 double-agent Kim Philby kept his Soviet masters apprised. The Cold War had truly begun. In this first book to tell the Gouzenko story, Amy Knight uses newly declassified files as well as interviews with several of the key players to examine the substance of Gouzenko's revelations and delve into his hidden motives for defecting. She explains how Gouzenko was really a pawn in a much larger game. And she brilliantly connects these events to the hardening of relations between Moscow and the West, the practice of guilt by association, and the end of the movement for international control of the atomic bomb.

Where's My Stuff?
Shipping & Returns