University Press of America
Pages: 362
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-4069-5 • Paperback • June 2008 • $77.99 • (£60.00)
Mari A. Firkatian (Ph.D. Indiana University) is Associate Professor at the University of Hartford, Hillyer College.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Acknowledgements
Part 3 Part I: A Bulgarian Diplomat and a French Courtier
Chapter 4 1 Mass Culture and Politics
Chapter 5 2 The Young Family
Chapter 6 3 Growing Up
Chapter 7 4 Wars and More Wars
Part 8 Part II: A Second Generation of Diplomats
Chapter 9 5 Growing Up Fast: World War
Chapter 10 6 The Disillusionments of Peacetime
Chapter 11 7 International Kid to First Woman Diplomat
Chapter 12 8 Admirable English
Chapter 13 9 The End of and Era
Chapter 14 Epilogue
Chapter 15 Bibliography
Chapter 16 Map
Chapter 17 Index
Chapter 18 About the Author
Exhuastive research in a number of languages makes Firkatian's book shine as a work of serious scholarship . . . Written for a 'general audience,' the prose is fresh and readable, while markedly thought-provoking in places . . . Diplomats and Dreamers is an innovative contribution to a sparse literature on a small country that offers new direction as well as bringing attention to an intriguing and well-researched topic. This book is informative and interesting enough for specialists, yet clear and cogent enough for a general audience.
— Slavic Review, December 2009
To track the history of a country or society through the experiences of one family is usually an enjoyable experience. This is even more the case with Diplomats and Dreamers because it concerns a country and a society with which few in the west are familiar. . . . Mari Firkatian has skillfully woven the personal and political into an enlightening and entertaining story . . .
— Professor Richard Crampton, retired Professor of East European History, University of Oxford