Frank Costigliola teaches history at the University of Rhode Island.
Costigliola's book is required reading for all serious students of
American-European relations from Versailles to 1933.
*The Historian*
The great virtue of this book—and Costigliola desrves
congratulations for it— is the intensive use and careful evaluation
of new materials. It has intelligent, often acute comments about
arms limitation, reparations, and the Kellogg-Briand pact.... This
is a fine piece of research by a scholar from whom much will be
heard.
*International History Review*
This is a subtle and imaginative contribution to the increasingly
accepted view that American foreign relations in the 1920s do not
fit a clownish, isolationist stereotype. The author succeeds in
going beyond the formal actions of governments to deal with the
ambivalent response to American culture and economic power.
*Foreign Affairs*
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