ONLY $9.90 DELIVERY INFO

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Peacemaker

U Thant, the United Nations and the Untold Story of the 1960s

Thant Myint-U

$36.99

Paperback

In stock
Ready to ship

QTY:

English
Atlantic Books
30 September 2025
In December 1971, after having stepped down as the United Nations' longest-serving Secretary-General, U Thant was ranked the sixth 'most admired man' in America. So why he is largely forgotten today?

In Peacemaker, Thant Myint-U traces his grandfather's rise from schoolteacher in a small Burmese backwater in 1947 to celebrity at the centre of global of politics just two decades later. He reveals U Thant's integral yet forgotten roles in some of the twentieth century's most critical crises - from battling white supremacist mercenaries in the Congo and mediating a peaceful end to the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 to ensuring the ceasefire held after the 1967 Six-Day War - and details the shifting world order that U Thant affected.

At once rigorous and hugely entertaining, Peacemaker is an intimate biography that not only attests to the power of hope, peace and individual actions in times of uncertainty, but also chronicles a golden age of diplomacy: a time when people believed that it was only by coming together that we could tackle the biggest threats posing humanity.
By:  
Imprint:   Atlantic Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   Export/Airside
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781838958954
ISBN 10:   1838958959
Pages:   384
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1: New World 2: Congo 3: Missile Crisis 4: Havana 5: Grand Slam 6: Turn! Turn! Turn! 7: Vietnam 8: Rolling Thunder 9: Kashmir 10: The Sound of Silence 11: Eve of Destruction 12: Gaza and the Sinai 13: The Six-Day War 14: Revolution 15: Bad Moon Rising 16: One World 17: Both Sides Now

Thant Myint-U is an award-winning historian, writer, conservationist and international public servant. An Honorary Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, he is the author of five books and his writing has been featured in many publications including the New York Times and the Financial Times.

Reviews for Peacemaker: U Thant, the United Nations and the Untold Story of the 1960s

A wonderful subject, beautifully written, evoking a world startlingly like and unlike our own - a reminder of paths tragically not taken, of idealism and cynicism - of how much the United Nations offered and could still offer. Essential reading for anyone interested in the origins and possibilities of our current global crisis. * Rory Stewart, bestselling author of Politics On the Edge * A brilliant portrait not just of a great and unjustly forgotten man, but of an entire age. That age feels very distant now: an era of optimism and idealism, when the postcolonial world first shook off its imperial shackles and began to test its strength. Peacemaker is a model of biographical thoroughness and insight, beautifully written and artfully shaped and plotted, it tells its improbable and altogether extraordinary story with an enviable mixture of writerly skill and scholarly authority. * William Dalrymple * A beautifully written biography about a man who led the UN through a time of great turbulence, risk and uncertainty. Important reading at any time in history; essential in the world of today. * Peter Frankopan * Amazing. This book will come as a revelation even to scholars of the UN in the Cold War period. * Frances Fitzgerald, author of Fire in the Lake * This isn't just a beautiful, gripping, and indispensable biography of the longest-serving United Nations secretary-general. By reconstructing his grandfather's reckoning with the upheavals of the 1960s, Thant Myint-U also rehabilitates almost forgotten aspirations for a postcolonial world beyond endless war and enduring hierarchy. These dreams revisited in this eye-opening and uplifting book have an enormous claim on the attention of Americans at a crossroads in their relation to global affairs. * Samuel Moyn, Kent Professor of Law and History at Yale University and author of Liberalism Against Itself * A gift: a primer on the Cold War era that revives the pivotal role of U Thant - the first non-European to lead the UN - foreshadowing the conflicts we face today. * Elizabeth Becker, author of You Don't Belong Here: How Three Women Rewrote the Story of War * U Thant devoted his life to the pursuit of peace in a fearsomely fractured world. With empathy, care, and scholarly rigor, Thant Myint-U reminds us that the truly courageous never abandoned their struggles for justice, even in the darkest of times. * Kevin Boyle, author of The Shattering: America in the 1960 * A sobering account, told elegantly and eruditely * Financial Times on The Hidden History of Burma *


See Also