Praise for Prisoners of History: "Compelling.powerful.[Lowe] looks at the ways in which a diverse set of countries have memorialized that bloody conflict, which set the stage for the world in which we still live. What Prisoners of History does do--and does well--is explain why groups in each country built the monuments in the first place and how changes in politics and international relations affected interactions with them afterward." -- Wall Street Journal "[An] inspired idea . Always thoughtful and evocative, sometimes controversial . Lowe's sensitive, disturbing book should be compulsory reading for both statue builders and statue topplers." -- The Sunday Times (UK) "Thought-provoking .
a perceptive and persuasive call for remembering the tragedies and triumphs of the past." -- Publishers Weekly "Fascinating and thoughtful." --Lawrence Freedman, Foreign Affairs Magazine "The well-balanced range here enables the retelling of some remarkable war stories, while also providing fascinating insights into the ways different nations have remembered or denied issues around national identity and the glory and horrors of war . this is some of the most thought-provoking writing about the Second World War." -- Spectator Magazine "In this timely book, which neatly combines history, art criticism, and travelogue . Lowe is a fine guide to these monuments because he feels the moral force--for good or bad--of each site he visits." -- The Times (UK) "[Lowe's] examples might rightly raise some hackles . Insightful accounts of memorials where there is usually more than meets the eye.
" -- Kirkus Reviews.