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Kansalainen Kekkonen
WSOY, 2021, 507 pp.
Rights sold:
FINLAND: WSOY (orig.)
ESTONIA: Varrak
WORLD ENGLISH: Cornell University Press
Reading materials:
English manuscript
|
Kansalainen Kekkonen
WSOY, 2021, 507 pp.
Rights sold:
FINLAND: WSOY (orig.)
ESTONIA: Varrak
WORLD ENGLISH: Cornell University Press
Reading materials:
English manuscript
We are thrilled to announce that the Estonian rights for THE FINNISH FACTOR: KEKKONEN, KENNEDY, KHRUSHCHEV AND THE COLD WAR by Pulitzer Prize-nominated journalist and author Gordon F. Sander have been acquired by Varrak! The deal was closed by Toomas Aasmäe at Elina Ahlback Literary Agency.
Download the full English manuscript by clicking here!
THE FINNISH FACTOR has garnered excellent reviews both in Finland and abroad:
Over the last quarter-century, the world has learned much about what happened behind the scenes during the Cold War. One big story, though, remains largely untold, and this book finally tells it. Finland and its brilliant leader, Urho Kekkonen, managed not only to balance enemy power blocs but also to contribute decisively to peace in Europe. By telling this story, THE FINNISH FACTOR: KEKKONEN, KENNEDY, KHRUSHCHEV AND THE COLD WAR adds a vital piece to our understanding of modern world history. It also provides a gripping account of the the greatest crisis in Finnish post-war history, the 1961 Note Crisis.
– Stephen Kinzer, former Berlin bureau chief, New York Times; senior fellow, Watson Institute for International Affairs, Brown University (US)
THE FINNISH FACTOR is remarkable and significant for several reasons. For one, it is the first, not to mention the most thorough examination of Finland’s recent history by an American – particularly its crucial and little understood role in the Cold War, when its status as a Soviet sphere of influence was a test of wills between the East and West… [—] Perhaps the high point of Sander’s spellbinding book is his account of the meeting between Finnish president Urho Kekkonen and US President John Kennedy, on the eve of the so-called 1961 Note Crisis, one of the great “forgotten” episodes of the Cold War, which includes a full never-before-published transcript of the pivotal two day conference. [—] THE FINNISH FACTOR, which reads like a page-turner, is a great read and an important and worthwhile – as well as fun – work of non-fiction and creative biography unto itself.
– Michael Franck, documentarian and film maker, Finland
So much has happened since the end of the Cold War that even a serious student of today’s crises would surely learn much by casting an eye back at Finland’s ‘active neutrality’ role in the dangerous Berlin crisis in the early 1960’s. Gordon Sander’s THE FINNISH FACTOR is gripping history, rich with insight, fascinating characters such as Kennedy, Khrushchev and Kekkonen, and valuable lessons in crisis understanding and management. Rarely does a small country play so large a role.
– Marvin Kalb, former Moscow bureau chief, CBS News; Murrow Professor Emeritus, Harvard University
THE FINNISH FACTOR
KEKKONEN, KENNEDY, KHRUSHCHEV AND THE COLD WAR
by Gordon F. Sander
WSOY, August 2021, 507 pp.
In the fall of 1961, Soviet and American tanks faced off at Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin in an explosive confrontation known as the Berlin Crisis which many feared might lead to World War III. At the same time, 1500 kilometers to the north, in Finland, the USSR and the US were also squaring off for another potentially explosive confrontation over the Kremlin’s desire to maintain its sphere of influence over that country.
This was called the Note Crisis. That crisis, the events leading up to it, and the three figures who were at the center of it—Urho Kekkonen, the Machiavellian president of Finland, who was then fighting for his political life; Nikita Khrushchev, the feisty Soviet premier and Kekkonen’s sponsor; and John Kennedy, the US president, who sent a top secret message of support to Kekkonen—comprise the climax of Gordon Sander’s groundbreaking book.
Sander’s biography, which focuses on Kekkonen’s pivotal first term, which culminated with the Note Crisis and his re-election to the presidency, is based on three years of research, and includes exclusive interviews with Khrushchev’s late son Sergey, Kekkonen’s former chiefs of staff and President of Finland, Sauli Niinistö.
THE FINNISH FACTOR is intended for the general audience and the scholarly one. It would be of interest to anyone who:
-is interested in reading and learning about one of the great “forgotten” crises of the Cold War
-is interested in Russian/Soviet history and/or Nikita Khrushchev
-is interested in the Kennedy administration.
KANSALAINEN KEKKONEN
Suuri suunnitelma
WSOY, August 2021, 507 pp.
Reading materials:
Full English manuscript
Rights sold:
FINLAND: Johnny Kniga (orig.)
ESTONIA: Varrak