Abyss: World on the Brink, War: How Conflict Shaped Us & War on Peace 3 Books Collection Set - Non Fiction - Hardcover
Free 48-Hour Delivery
On orders over £35
Fast UK Dispatch
Orders shipped within 24 hours
Easy 30-Day Returns
Hassle-free returns on eligible items
Secure Checkout
Safe & encrypted payment options
Titles in This Set:
Abyss: World on the Brink, The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962
War How Conflict Shaped Us
War on Peace
Format: Hardback
Overview:
Dive into three masterful histories that illuminate how war shapes civilizations, politics, and everyday life. This exclusive hardcover collection pairs Max Hastings’s vivid, ground-level chronicle of the Cuban Missile Crisis with two towering works of historical analysis: Margaret MacMillan’s probing look at how conflict molds societies, and Ronan Farrow’s incisive examination of how war redefines power in the modern age. Together, these titles offer a panoramic yet intimate viewpoint on war—its origins, its consequences, and the uneasy but undeniable ways it drives cultural and geopolitical change. Perfect for history fans, students, and curious readers who want context, clarity, and compelling storytelling in one premium set. The hardcover format ensures lasting shelf appeal and makes this trio a standout gift for lovers of rigor, narrative craft, and thought-provoking insight.
What Makes This Collection Special:
This is more than three books—it's a curated journey through conflict from three distinctive angles. Hastings grounds you in the immediacy of real decisions during the Cuban Missile Crisis, blending eyewitness accounts with documentary records to create a tense, cinematic experience. MacMillan steps back to reveal the social architecture of war: how communities, economies, and identities are reshaped in its furnace, and why societies remember or forget the violence they endured. Farrow then shifts the lens to contemporary geopolitics, tracing how power structures, media, and policy shift when war is waged in the modern arena. The result is a cohesive reading arc that informs, unsettles, and equips readers with a richer understanding of why conflicts arise and how they reverberate long after the last shot is fired. Collectible, authoritative, and deeply engaging, this collection is ideal for gift-giving and for readers who want a bookshelf that educates as it enthralls.
Books Included in This Collection:
Abyss: World on the Brink, The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962
Max Hastings’s graphic history is a vivid, multi-voiced retelling of one of the Cold War’s closest brushes with catastrophe. It braids first-hand accounts, diaries, and archival material to paint intimate portraits of Fidel Castro, Nikita Khrushchev, Kennedy-era decision-makers, and the ordinary people who felt the tremors of the crisis. The book’s cinematic pacing, careful sourcing, and layered perspectives give readers a granular sense of how brinkmanship unfolds, why misjudgments occur, and what the near-misses teach us about leadership under pressure. This volume stands as a definitive, immersive entry point into Cold War geopolitics and the human cost of high-stakes diplomacy.
War How Conflict Shaped Us
In this sweeping inquiry, Professor Margaret MacMillan asks not just when war began, but how war has continually remade societies. From prehistoric tribes to modern nation-states, the book traces war’s influence on social structures, politics, law, technology, and daily life. It challenges readers to consider war as a force that accelerates change—sometimes for the better, sometimes with lasting harms. With elegant clarity, MacMillan connects macro events to micro consequences, helping readers understand the enduring patterns of conflict and the resilience that follows. A compelling blend of narrative drive and scholarly insight, this is essential reading for anyone seeking context about why wars erupt and how communities endure them.
War on Peace
Ronan Farrow takes readers on a globe-trotting investigation into how U.S. foreign policy has shifted in the face of new threats. From Washington corridors to distant battlefields and fragile states, Farrow interrogates the levers of power, the voices often left unheard, and the complex diplomacy that shapes outcomes. The book blends investigative reporting, on-the-ground reporting, and policy analysis to reveal how peacekeeping, collaboration, and conflict intersect with human rights, national security, and domestic politics. It’s a timely, lucid look at the costs and consequences of political choices in a dangerous era, written in a gripping, accessible style that invites readers to questions long after the final page.
Who This Set Is Perfect For:
History enthusiasts seeking rigorous, richly sourced narratives; students studying modern geopolitics or global history; readers who value cross-disciplinary perspectives on war’s effects on society, governance, and human behavior. It’s also an excellent gift for academics, book clubs, and collectors who prize comprehensive, thematically linked histories. If you’re building a home library that informs, sparks conversation, and remains readable and engaging from cover to cover, this trio fits beautifully. The hardcover format adds shelf presence for coffee-table display or study spaces, making it ideal for gifting to a thoughtful reader or to a history-loving student starting a powerful reading journey.
Key Benefits:
- Three authoritative perspectives on war and its wide-reaching impact
- Rich, multi-source narratives that combine eyewitness accounts, diaries, and archival material
- Accessible yet rigorous writing that appeals to both casual readers and researchers
- Premium hardcover edition for durability and display value
- Great value compared with purchasing each title separately
- Perfect for gifting, study groups, and classroom reading lists
- Excellent for BookTok and history-focused communities seeking thoughtful insights
- Creates a cohesive reading journey from ancient conflict to modern diplomacy
About the Author:
Aphorisms aside, this set features three renowned voices in modern history. Max Hastings is a celebrated military historian and journalist known for immersive battlescapes and clear, evidence-based storytelling. His work often foregrounds eyewitness testimony and archival depth, bringing distant events to life with human texture. Margaret MacMillan is a distinguished historian and author of acclaimed works such as Paris 1919 and The War That Ended Peace, renowned for linking macro diplomacy with everyday social life and for guiding readers through the moral and political questions war raises. Ronan Farrow is a prize-winning investigative journalist and author recognized for rigorous field reporting and fearless pursuit of truth in complex geopolitical landscapes. Together, these authors offer a complementary, authoritative trio that invites readers to learn, reflect, and engage with history on multiple levels.
Why You’ll Love This Set:
This collection delivers a complete, shelf-stable history course in three compelling voices. You gain a deep understanding of how war’s pressures shape societies, power structures, and international relations—without sacrificing narrative drive. The premium hardcover format, the cohesive theme across three distinctive viewpoints, and the potential to inspire discussion make this set a standout addition to any serious reader’s library or a meaningful gift for someone who loves history, politics, and human stories under pressure. It’s a durable, beautifully designed set that promises hours of enlightening reading and thoughtful conversation.
Please Note: The individual books included in this listing will be dispatched as per the original UK ISBN and UK edition cover image shown in the image.