The World Conquerors. The Real War Criminals
Svijet u XIX. i XX. st.
086634
London
1958
12×18,5
meki
296
engleski
Cijena: 45,00 EUR
First edition. The World Conquerors (originally Világhódítók) is a book by Hungarian author Louis Marschalko (Lajosa Marschalko), first published in 1958. The work is a controversial historical analysis of the rise of communism and the events after World War II from the perspective of a Hungarian nationalist in exile. The book deals with what the author calls "the real war criminals" and argues that the peoples of Central Europe were deceived into becoming Soviet satellites after the war. Marschalko describes communism as a global movement driven by a transnational force. He examines the causes of the war and the outcomes of the Nuremberg Trials. The work expresses sharp contempt for the Western governments of the time, accusing them of being lenient towards Soviet expansion. Louis Marschalko (1903–1968) was a Hungarian journalist and writer who lived in Germany after the war, fleeing the communist regime in Hungary, which wanted him as a war criminal. His work often focuses on the role of specific groups in global political upheavals and is considered highly nationalistic and controversial due to its anti-Semitic elements. Translated from the Hungarian by A. Suranyi.