It is an historically interesting book on the development of Soviet and Russian science and presents the background of the Soviet nuclear bomb program in the cold war age. In war times, Khalatnikov was a chief of the military staff of nuclear research. He writes about the internal conditions of Soviet society, the way of operating of the Soviet authorities and ways for scientists to interact with them. It gives many interesting insights into the development of superconductivity and superfluidity. The book is written by the most experienced and best informed person among the few living Russian scientists in the environment of Landau. Many stories of the book were never published before and considered as "top secret".
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"The publication of a memoir by leading Russian physicist Isaak Khalatnikov, known as 'Khalat' to his friends, is an event to be welcomed by anyone interested in 20th-century physics. ... I thoroughly enjoyed From the Atomic Bomb to the Landau Institute. ... it will be of great interest to all those who have come into contact, either personally or through the literature, with the remarkable scientific achievements of Landau and the members of his school." (Pierre Hohenberg, Physics Today, November, 2013)