
The Desktop Digest of Despots and Dictators
An A to Z of Tyranny
Gilbert Alter-Gilbert(Author)
Skyhorse Publishing
Published on 17. January 2013
Book
Hardback
224 pages
978-1-61608-830-9 (ISBN)
Description
The Desktop Digest of Dictators and Despots is a compendium and quick reference guide to history's most notorious absolutist rulers and authoritarian regimes. In a handsome hardcover format, this handy encyclopedia of totalitarians is as informative as it is titillating, a lurid panorama of history's most malignant autarchs with original full-color portraits and accompanying psychobiographical profiles. From pharaohs to ayatollahs, from Caesar to Hitler, here are fifty-three profiles of history's most warped personalities and their shocking crimes.
Roman Emperor Nero, who lit the roads to the Coliseum's night games by lining them with human torches made of the burning bodies of crucified Christians
Alfredo Stroessner, under whose administration Paraguay offered comfortable refuge to former Nazis while rifle-toting "sportsmen" flocked to the countryside on weekends to legally hunt Indians
Idi Amin, the dictator of Uganda, where power outages at the capitol were a routine occurrence because the sluiceways at the nearby hydroelectric dam were clogged with the bodies of so many citizens executed in his torture cells that the pampered local disposal team-the crocodiles-couldn't eat them fast enough
The horrifying pageant of tyranny has trailed in its wake a vicious train of exploitation, intolerance and oppression-war, conquest, subjugation, slavery, imprisonment, torture and execution-which continues unabated to the present day. Dictators never disappoint when it comes to proving that absolute power corrupts absolutely. This is the perfect handbook for educators, armchair historians, and pop-culture pundits.
Roman Emperor Nero, who lit the roads to the Coliseum's night games by lining them with human torches made of the burning bodies of crucified Christians
Alfredo Stroessner, under whose administration Paraguay offered comfortable refuge to former Nazis while rifle-toting "sportsmen" flocked to the countryside on weekends to legally hunt Indians
Idi Amin, the dictator of Uganda, where power outages at the capitol were a routine occurrence because the sluiceways at the nearby hydroelectric dam were clogged with the bodies of so many citizens executed in his torture cells that the pampered local disposal team-the crocodiles-couldn't eat them fast enough
The horrifying pageant of tyranny has trailed in its wake a vicious train of exploitation, intolerance and oppression-war, conquest, subjugation, slavery, imprisonment, torture and execution-which continues unabated to the present day. Dictators never disappoint when it comes to proving that absolute power corrupts absolutely. This is the perfect handbook for educators, armchair historians, and pop-culture pundits.
Reviews / Votes
"An improbably fun compendium of the world's worst." New York Daily News"Informative and entertaining." Booklist "An improbably fun compendium of the world's worst." New York Daily News
"Informative and entertaining." Booklist
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York, NY
United States
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
Color illustrations throughout
Dimensions
Height: 193 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
635 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-61608-830-9 (9781616088309)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Gilbert Alter-Gilbert is a critic, translator, and literary historian whose recent publications include the grim anthology Life and Limb and an English-language edition of Vicente Huidobro's Manifestos Manifest. An "experimental classicist", Alter-Gilbert is an inveterate practitioner of fictive history, a genre pioneered by such illustrious forebears as Marcel Schwob and Raymond Roussel.