Three Days at the Brink is part biography of Franklin Roosevelt and part a history of the Tehran Conference, a meeting between Franklin Roosevelt (president of the United States), Winston Churchill (prime minister of Great Britain), and Joseph Stalin (premier [which is basically a nice sounding word for dictator] of the Soviet Union). At this conference Roosevelt first proposed the idea for D-Day.
Readers of Three Days at the Brink will learn about how America’s allies in the war (Soviet Union and Great Britain) responded to Roosevelt’s proposal, the complex relations between these three countries, and much more!
Why I like it: As I read Three Days at the Brink I was in a state of utter fascination. I was mesmerized, intrigued, captivated, spellbound…I felt feelings that words can not describe… I learned exciting new things on every page… I fulfilled a lifelong dream by gaining a greater knowledge of WWII history… I learned to love both reading and history even more than I did before… I laughed, I cried, I rejoiced, and I sorrowed. I danced and was still, I lived and let live, I sat down and stood up, sowed and reaped, loved and despised, and oh, oh, best, best of all, I even had my cake and ate it too. Okay, okay, maybe I’m being a little over dramatic here…