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No Ordinary Men by Fritz Stern and Elisabeth Sifton
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No Ordinary Men

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No Ordinary Men by Fritz Stern and Elisabeth Sifton
Hardcover $19.95
Sep 17, 2013 | ISBN 9781590176818

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    Sep 17, 2013 | ISBN 9781590176818

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  • Sep 17, 2013 | ISBN 9781590177020

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Praise

“Sifton and Stern’s chronicle is brief but deeply informed. And while Hans’s name appears in most academic studies of the resistance, this new book is clearly written with a larger audience in mind. The prose conveys a sense of historical perspective but also, just below the surface, a compassion possibly born of the authors’ own long-distance links to these men and their era.”
The Boston Globe

“A story that needs to be heard.”
Library Journal

“A convincing argument that theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer and his often overlooked brother-in-law Hans von Dohnanyi ‘deserve to be remembered together’ for their courageous resistance to Hitler’s Nazi regime….A concise yet powerful contribution to an even larger history.”
—Kirkus Reviews


Praise for Stern’s prior works:

“Fritz Stern’s pointed reflections [in Five Germanys I Have Known] upon the fragility of democratic liberties and the unpredictable ease with which they can wither and die should be required reading for every informed citizen.”
—Tony Judt
 
“[The Politics of Cultural Despair] is a superb cultural history, erudite, thoughtful, imaginative, beautifully written.”
—Klemens von Klemperer, professor emeritus of European history at Smith College
 
“No one has written better on the country’s rise and fall than Fritz Stern.”
—Jackie Wullschlager, Financial Times
 
Praise for Sifton’s The Serenity Prayer:

“A landmark work on the liberal ideals of the progressive American tradition, reaffirming their relevance for today…. A major contribution to the intellectual history of modernity.”
—Arthur Schlesinger Jr.

“[An] ebullient and shrewd meditation on faith and social action. . . . A peaceable state of mind simply accompanies the reader as he ends this effortlessly elegant, uniformly sensible paean to the human faith that Sifton inherited.”
—Carlin Romano, Philadelphia Inquirer

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