Quotes
“With characteristic flair and elegance, Adam Zamoyski dissects the
paranoia, suspicion, and conspiracy theories which followed in the wake
of the French Revolution. He sketches out the birth of the modern police
state in this era, as well as the origins of European totalitarianism
and the beginnings of what we would later come to call class struggle. Phantom Terror is a timely and original history book, a brilliant guide to the past which will inspire reflections about the present as well.” Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Gulag: A History
“This diligently researched, beautifully written,
and passionately argued work of scholarship completely convinces. Adam Zamoyski
conclusively proves his case against the reactionary European Legitimist
monarchy-dictatorships, and he does so with appropriately aristocratic panache.
In so doing he leads an entire herd of sacred cows to the abattoir of history.
This is revisionist history at its absolute best.” Andrew Roberts, New York Times bestselling author of The Storm of War
“Scintillating and original.” Economist (London)
“A dense but stimulating work; Zamoyski
takes an infamous eighteenth-century class struggle and painstakingly shows
how the resulting suppression manifested itself through sophisticated
spy networks and Germany’s heightened nationalism, as well as a chasm
between the economic and social classes that persists today.” Publishers Weekly
“Zamoyski focuses on the period after the French Revolution of 1789, when fear of
liberal ideas became associated with revolutionary violence and
European governments promulgated a spate of reactionary polices…In pursuit of the story of paranoia and repression, Zamoyski has mined
an impressive selection of primary sources from Britain to Austria…The book is well written and
should appeal to a wide audience.” Library Journal
“Zamoyski shows how the French Revolution instigated fear in the
hearts of European governments, most of it unfounded and falsely propagated by
undefined fears and self-perpetuating rumors…His point is
important, and his book comprehensively examines the role of the powerful over
the weak and the effects of governmental overreactions.” Kirkus Reviews