Deserter from Death: Dispatches from Western Europe 1950-2000
From the publisher: A self-described "deserter from death," Polish-born Daniel Singer narrowly escaped the Holocaust to become one of the Left's leading social and political commentators. From the Algerian crisis in the late fifties, through the world-shaking events of May '68, to the post-Reagan, post-Thatcher era, this is an effervescent social history of the past half-century. Deserter from Death collects Singer's writing from when he was a young reporter for the Economist to his final years as the Nation's celebrated European correspondent.\r\n








