Hungary in recently published books

Hungary in Books Recently Published:

H. David Baer: The struggle of Hungarian Lutherans under communism (College Station: Texas A&M University Press)

Adam Biro: One must also be Hungarian (Chicago: University of Chicago)

Charles R. Bowlus: The battle of Lechfeld and its aftermath, August 955: The end of the age of migrations in the Latin West (Aldershot, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate)

András Bozóki & Miklós Sükösd: Anarchism in Hungary: Theory, history, legacies (Boulder, CO: Social Science Monographs)

Bryan Cartledge: The will to survive: A history of Hungary (Tiverton: Timewell Press)

Gary Chapman: The delectable Dollies: The story of the Dolly Sisters, icons of the jazz age (Stroud: Sutton)

Emilio Colombo: Financial market imperfections and corporate decisions: Lessons from the transition process in Hungary (Heidelberg: Physica-Verlag)

Sándor Csengõdi, Rolf Jungnickel & Dieter Urban: Foreign takeovers and wages: Theory and evidence from Hungary (Torino : Centro Studi Luca d'Agliano)

Eden Davies: Beyond dance: Laban's legacy of movement analysis (New York: Routledge)

R.J.W. Evans: Austria, Hungary, and the Habsburgs: Essays on Central Europe, c.1683-1867 (Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press)

Martyn Everett: War and revolution: The Hungarian anarchist movement in World War I and the Budapest Commune (1919) (London: Kate Sharpley Library)

Towiah Friedman: The extermination of the Hungarian Jewry and the robbery of her property: The main SS-criminals who have sent the Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz to be exterminated (Haifa: Institute of Documentation in Israel)

Charles Gati: Failed illusions: Moscow, Washington, Budapest, and the 1956 Hungarian revolt (Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center Press; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press)

András Gero: Imagined history: Chapters from nineteenth- and twentieth-century Hungarian symbolic politics (Boulder, CO: East European Monographs)

Elizabeth Blum Goldstein [interviewed by Shana Fogarty; Maryann McLoughlin O'Donnell, ed.]: Of a comb, a prayer book, sugar cubes, & lice: Survivor of six concentration camps—Elizabeth Blum Goldstein: A-20737 (Margate, NJ: Comte)

Roger Gough: A good comrade: János Kádár, communism and Hungary (London; New York: I.B. Tauris)

Jessica Gregson: The angel makers (Wendens Ambo: Paper)

Guidelines on credit risk mitigation: Legal framework in Hungary (Wien: Österreichische Nationalbank; Austrian Financial Market Authority)

Michael Hallett: Stefan Lorant: Godfather of photojournalism (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press)

Gábor Halmai: Hungary: Human rights in the face of terrorism (Lake Merry, FL: Vandeplas)

Anssi Halmesvirta: Ideology and argument: Studies in British, Finnish and Hungarian thought (Helsinki: SKS/Finnish Literature Society)

Paul A Hanebrink: In defense of Christian Hungary: Religion, nationalism, and antisemitism, 1890-1944 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press)

Juan Horváth: A panorama of Hungarian mathematics in the twentieth century (Berlin: Springer; Budapest: János Bolyai Mathematical Society)

Gregorio Impavido & Roberto Rezende Rocha: Competition and performance in the Hungarian second pillar (Washington, DC: World Bank—Financial Sector Operations and Policy Dept.)

László Karsai: From deprivation of rights to genocide: To the memory of the victims of the Hungarian Holocaust (Budapest: Hungarian National Museum)

Miriam Katin: We are on our own: A memoir (Montreal: Drawn & Quarterly)

Peter Kenez: Hungary from the Nazis to the Soviets: The establishment of the

Communist regime in Hungary, 1944-1948 (Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press)

Imre Kertész: Liquidation (London: Harvill Secker)

Michael W. Klein: An odyssey of survival (Jerusalem: Mazo Publishers)

Michael Korda: Journey to a revolution: A personal memoir and history of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 (New York: HarperCollins)

Z.J. Kosztolnyik: The dynastic policy of the Árpáds: Géza I to Emery (1074-1204) (Boulder, CO: East European Monographs)

Ábrahám Kovács: The history of the Free Church of Scotland's mission to the Jews in Budapest and its impact on the Reformed Church of Hungary, 1841-1914 (Frankfurt am Main; New York: P. Lang)

Tamás Krausz: The Soviet and Hungarian Holocausts: A comparative essay (Boulder, CO: Social Science Monographs; Wayne, NJ: Center for Hungarian Studies and Publications)

Erich Lessing & George Konrád: Revolution in Hungary: The 1956 Budapest uprising (London : Thames & Hudson)

Howard N. Lupovitch: Jews at the crossroads: Tradition and accommodation during the golden age of the Hungarian nobility, 1729-1878 (Budapest; New York:Central European University Press)

Kati Marton: The great escape: Nine Jews who fled Hitler and changed the world (New York: Simon & Schuster)

Elaine Kalman Naves: Shoshanna’s story: A mother, a daughter, and the shadows of history (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press)

Julian Padowicz: Mother and me: Escape from Warsaw 1939 (Chicago: Academy Chicago Publishers)

Anna Porter: The storyteller: A memoir of secrets, magic and lies (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre)

Michael Pratt: The great country houses of Hungary (New York: Abbeville Press)

Gary Don Rhodes: Lugosi: His life in films, on stage, and in the hearts of horror lovers (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company)

Gergely Romsics: Myth and remembrance: The dissolution of the Habsburg Empire in the memoir literature of the Austro-Hungarian political elite (Boulder, CO: Social Science Monographs; Wayne, NJ: Center for Hungarian Studies and Publications)

Federico Santi & John Gacher: Art nouveau ironwork of Austria and Hungary (Atglen, PA: Schiffer)

John W. Schiemann: The politics of pact-making: Hungary's negotiated transition to democracy in comparative perspective (Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan)

Erwin A. Schmidl: The Hungarian Revolution 1956 (Oxford: Osprey)

Maj Sjöwall & Per Wahlöö: Martin Beck: The man who went up in smoke (London: Harper Perennial)

David E. Schneider: Bartók, Hungary, and the renewal of tradition: Case studies in the intersection of modernity and nationality (Berkeley: Univesity of California Press)

Victor Sebestyen: Twelve days: The story of the 1956 Hungarian revolution (New York: Pantheon Books)

Anna Seleny: The political economy of state-society relations in Hungary and Poland: From communism to the European Union (Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press)

Balázs A. Szelényi: Hungary's royal free towns and the failure of the Central European bourgeoisie (New York: Palgrave Macmillan)

Miklós Vámos: The book of fathers (London: Abacus)

John Van der Kiste: Emperor Francis Joseph: Life, death and the fall of the Hapsburg Empire (Stroud: Sutton)

Gerta Vrbová: Trust and deceit: A tale of survival in Slovakia and Hungary, 1939-1945 (London; Portland, OR: Vallentine Mitchell)

Eric Beckett Weaver: National narcissism: The intersection of the nationalist cult and gender in Hungary (Oxford; New York: Lang)

Jason Wittenberg: Crucibles of political loyalty: Church institutions and electoral continuity in Hungary (Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press)

 

For Young Readers:

Andrea Cheng: Eclipse (Asheville, NC: Front Street)

Heather Docalavich: Hungary (Philadelphia: Mason Crest Publishers)

Magdolna Hargittai: Cooking the Hungarian way (Minneapolis, MN: Lerner; London: Turnaround)

Bobbie Kalman & Barbara Bedell: Refugee child :
my memories of the 1956 Hungarian revolution (
New York: Crabtree)

Eva Wiseman: Kanada (Toronto : Tundra Books)

 

Travel Guides:

Annabel Barber & Emma Roper-Evans: Budapest: A city guide (London: Somerset)

Budapest (Peterborough: Thomas Cook)

Stephen Fallon: Budapest (Footscray, Vic; Oakland, CA: Lonely Planet) 

Charles Hebbert & Dan Richardson: The rough guide to Budapest (London: Rough Guides)

Michael Jacobs: Budapest (London: Granta Books)

Stephan Lang: Hungary (London: Evans)

Dante Mena: Adventure guide: Hungary, the Czech & Slovak republics (Edison, NJ: Hunter; Garsington: Windsor)

Andrew Princz: Frommer's Budapest & the best of Hungary (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley)

Brian Richards: Budapest and Hungary (London: New Holland)

Rick Steves & Cameron Hewitt: Rick Steves' best of Eastern Europe (Emeryville, CA: Avalon Travel)

Craig Turp: Budapest (New York: DK Pub)

 
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