C.J. (Christopher John) Chivers is a senior writer for the New York Times and its former Moscow Bureau Chief. He was an infantry officer in the US Marines from 1988 to 1994 and served in the First Gulf War. He is the recipient of numerous prizes including a shared Pulitzer for International Reporting in 2009 for coverage of the war in Afghanistan. He has reported from many of the major war-torn areas of the world. He lives with his family in Rhode Island.
With impelling force, C. J. Chivers tells a remarkable story of how
this one, superbly reliable firearm became the most abundant ever
produced, and was to exceed the consequences even of Soviet nuclear
know-how in the Cold War, and beyond
*Alistair Horne, author of 'The Price of Glory' and 'A Savage War
of Peace'*
Dazzling ... startling ... The Gun does exactly what the best art
history or music writing does - it opens our eyes to see anew the
familiar
*Doug Stanton, author of 'Horse Soldiers'*
The Gun is for those who wonder how we fight today and why we fight
that way. C. J. Chivers has given us a seminal work
*James Bradley, author of 'Flags of Our Fathers'*
Absorbing and beautifully written ... The story of this particular
weapon becomes in an important sense the story of the violence and
threat at the heart of the more than sixty years since the gun was
first introduced
*Richard Overy*
Chivers is a first-rate war correspondent and a prodigious
researcher ... The Gun is likely to become the standard account of
the world's standard assault rifle
*New York Times Book Review*
Chivers's mastery of history and engineering is matched by his
mastery of language ... The Gun is a riveting read
*Guardian*
Chivers tells the story well ... [he is] superb on the technical
history of the AK-47 and its predecessors, but he also strikingly
underlines its human cost as well as weaving adeptly through the
propaganda
*Financial Times*
A formidable feat of research and writing ... he has produced
surely the final word on one of the most iconic weapons of our
times
*Independent on Sunday*
Chivers is admirably meticulous in his research
*Telegraph*
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