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Here, 12 books to watch if Oppenheimer peaked your interest in the atomic bomb—including the 700-page biography that Nolan based his film on. American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J ...
Review by Brandy Schillace Read the review During the Cold War, the CIA may have had as much success with books and magazines as with gun-running and spies. Review by Gary Saul Morson Read the review ...
PATRICK Buchanan, the columnist and sometimes candidate for president, is all agog over Pavel Sudoplatov, a former KGB agent who claims firsthand knowledge of Soviet espionage into U.S. atomic secr… ...
As it happened, Nolan had recently completed “Tenet,” a movie that references the atomic bomb, and one of its stars, Robert Pattinson, had given the director a book of Oppenheimer’s speeches ...
The definitive telling of that story is Richard Rhodes’ Pulitzer Prize–winning The Making of the Atomic Bomb, first released in 1986. The 800-page tome has become something of a sacred text ...
How 5 People Survived Nagasaki’s Nuclear Hell. Three days after Hiroshima, an American B-29 dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki. A new book tells stories of those who lived through horror.
E. Tammy Kim reviews “Korean Nuclear Diaspora,” by Yuko Takahashi, a new ethnography of Korean survivors of the atomic-bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the Second World War.
A book by a Naval Academy professor who is under investigation for alleged plagiarism was withdrawn yesterday from stores. Michael Pietsch, the publisher of Little, Brown and Co., said he asked ...
Seventy-five years ago, on the bright clear morning of Aug. 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, immediately killing 70,000 people, and so grievously crushing, burning ...
Read a Q&A with James Cameron about why he is hellbent on making 'Ghosts Of Hiroshima' movie that will bring nightmarish look ...