My Account
Welcome
Sign In / Register
0
items
£0.00
View Basket
Home
Maps and Atlases
Road Maps & Atlases
Street Maps & Atlases
Wall Maps
Walking/Topographic Maps & Atlases
Cycling Long-distance Route Maps & Atlases
World Atlases
Features and Offers
Top 10 Bestsellers
Top 10 New in stock
Inspiring Destinations
Gap year gear - Top 10
Special offers
Events at Stanfords
Visa and Passport
Books
For kids
Signed books
Travel Guides
Travel Writing & Other Literature
Guide Books
Fiction
Photographic/Illustrated Books
Gifts
Gifts for travel-lovers
Top 10 gifts under £10
Top 10 gifts for kids
Globes
Customised Mapping
About Us
Contact Us
Stanfords London Store
Stanfords Bristol Store
The History of Stanfords
Terms and Conditions
FAQ
Privacy Policy
Job Vacancies
Business Mapping
Home
Activities and Interests
History
Talk of the Devil
Talk of the Devil
£7.99
BUY
Temporarily out of stock, order now to reserve this item.
Author:
Riccardo Orizio
Publisher:
Vintage
Catalogue:
119187
Size:
13x20 cm
What happened to the great dictators of contemporary history, responsible for some of its most gruesome chapters? And do they still seem as terrifying as when they held power? An unrepentant, Idi Armin, lives in exile in Saudi Arabia and still meddles in African wars. Before dying, Bokassa proclaims himself the 13th Apostle of the Roman Catholic Church and talks of his secret meetings with the Pope. Colonel Menghitsu defends his Red Terror campaign. Mrs Hoxha, from her cell in Tirana, argues why the most isolated regime in the world was right to adopt a brutal Stalinist ideology. Paris-based Baby Doc Duvalier speaks about voodoo, solar panels, his women and his lost money. Mrs Milosevic defends the wars in the former Yugoslavia and declares her love for her husband. Jaruzelski reveals his personal transition from son of an aristocratic family to autocrat army general in sunglasses. Riccardo Orizio has tracked down these fallen tyrants and thrown a new light on people whose names have become synonymous with misery, death and terror for entire nations.
Riccardo Orizio is a London correspondent for La Repubblica. He is the author of Lost White Tribes which was shortlisted for the Thomas Cook Travel Book Award. He lives in London.
Share a link
Review this Product?
Cancel
Follow @StanfordsTravel
Content
About Us
Can't Find What You're Looking For?
Contact Us
Delivery Options and Charges
FAQ
Popular Searches
Affiliate with Stanfords
eCommerce Software
by Exact Abacus Ltd