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Advance Praise for Fred Kaplan's "1959: The Year Everything Changed" "An engrossing story about not just where the '60s came from but the birth of the future. Kaplan does a masterful job of weaving together the strands - in politics, society, culture, and science -- that have brought us to the postmodern age." --Jonathan Alter, author of "The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope" "It turns out there's only one degree of separation between Miles Davis, the brilliant jazz innovator, and Herman Kahn, the Strangelovian nuclear-war theorist--and his name is Fred Kaplan. No…mehr

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Advance Praise for Fred Kaplan's "1959: The Year Everything Changed" "An engrossing story about not just where the '60s came from but the birth of the future. Kaplan does a masterful job of weaving together the strands - in politics, society, culture, and science -- that have brought us to the postmodern age." --Jonathan Alter, author of "The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope" "It turns out there's only one degree of separation between Miles Davis, the brilliant jazz innovator, and Herman Kahn, the Strangelovian nuclear-war theorist--and his name is Fred Kaplan. No one else could throw this fabulous cocktail party of a popular history, teeming with defiant hipsters, visionary inventors, artistic rulebreakers, and troublemakers of all kinds." --Hendrik Hertzberg, Senior Editor, the "New Yorker" ""1959" is a riveting account of the year our modern age began. Everything did change, and you'll be amazed by how much was going on, and how much it has affected the way you live your life now." --Kevin Baker, author of "Strivers Row, Dreamland, and Paradise Alley" "Take a ride on the New Frontier with Fred Kaplan, your insightful (and hip) guide to the space race, thermonuclear war, the civil rights movement, the 'sick comics, ' the Beats, and the beginnings of the Vietnam War, all to a soundtrack by Dave Brubeck, Ornette Coleman, Miles, and Motown." --Donald Fagen, cofounder, Steely Dan
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Autorenporträt
Fred Kaplan writes the "War Stories" column in Slate, contributes frequently to the "New York Times'" Arts & Leisure section, and blogs about jazz for "Stereophile." A Pulitzer Prize winning former "Boston Globe" reporter who covered the Pentagon and post-Soviet Moscow, he has also written for the "New Yorker," "New York," the "Atlantic," the "Washington Post," and other publications. He is the author of "Daydream Believers: How a Few Grand Ideas Wrecked American Power," also available from Wiley. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife, Brooke Gladstone. http: //www.1959thebook.com