It will be decades until someone can begin to write a history of the Balkans conflicts of the last decade of the twentieth century. Until then, few accounts will be more valuable than Louis Sell's first-hand account of the twelve years of Slobodan Milosevic from his conversion to nationalism in Kosovo to his transfer to the International Tribunal in The Hague. As very few others, Sell has been on the different scenes of the conflicts, met the different actors, seen the drama from different perspectives, and been able to put the pieces together. He has written a highly readable and most interesting book.-Carl Bildt, former Prime Minister of Sweden and High Representative for Bosnian Peace
Sell is authoritative on Milosevic's fall from power. . . . [He] clearly knows the territory. -- Mary H. Meier * Boston Globe *
Louis Sell brings to his fascinating study of the Serbian tyrant a deep experience in the Balkans, an authority based on his own participation in some of the events he describes, and a keen analytical eye. This is a first-rate book.-Warren Zimmermann, United States Ambassador to Yugoslavia, 1989-1992
More than a biography, this book provides a compact, coherent review of the sad drama that occupied so much of the West's attention in the 1990s. * Foreign Affairs *
Louis Sell systematically maps the rise and fall of Slobodan Milosevic in the first comprehensive biography of the man seen as most responsible for the violent disintegration of former Yugoslavia. Armed with years of experience as a diplomat and analyst of the Balkans, Sell has written a scholarly and compelling account about Slobodan Milosevic. It is an important work that merits attention from anyone who wants to understand the nature of Slobodan Milosevic's disastrous rule.-Laura Silber, author of The Death of Yugoslavia
The war crimes trial of former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic . . . makes this political biography especially timely. . . . [V]aluable for its background on the current trial and coverage of recent history of a troubled region. Recommended for most libraries. * Library Journal *
Sell . . . offer[s] a shrewd assessment of the former dictator. -- Dusko Doder * The Nation *
[C]ompelling. . . . Sell's account, based on both the public record and interviews with many of the principals as well as his personal experiences, offers an impressive yield of telling insights and revealing anecdotes. -- Andrew Nagorski * Washington Post *
Sell, a former U.S. foreign service officer with many years of service in the Balkans, maintains the detached, objective style that has become appropriate for the anatomization of a criminal. . . . [Slobodan Milosevic and the Destruction of Yugoslavia] is the better for being written by someone with an educated sympathy for both the Serbs and, as they were once known, the Yugoslavs. . . . A strikingly useful aspect of this book is the detail it gives, often at first hand, about the shameful vacillations-to put it no higher-of the Western mediators. -- Christopher Hitchens * Wilson Quarterly *
Sell's book is certainly the most comprehensive and up-to-date on both Milosevic and, as his subtitle suggests, the destruction of Yugoslavia. It is detailed and well sourced . . . Sell's hefty tome will be a major work of reference for many years to come. -- Tim Judah * Survival *
Louis Sell's study is a . . . substantial book. . . . His is the most comprehensive and up-to-date account of the war so far published in English. He is fair-minded and keeps his diplomatic cool until the end, when with justice he calls Mr. Milosevic 'an ugly killer' who even now denies the fact of horrendous crimes, and his own responsibility for them. * The Economist *
[R]iveting. . . . -- Ian Traynor * The Guardian *
A welcome biography of the 'Butcher of the Balkans' [and] . . . an important contribution to the literature surrounding the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the ethnic wars that followed. * Kirkus Reviews *
The great strength of Slobodan Milosevic and the Destruction of Yugoslavia is that it is written with internal as well as external knowledge. Sell's service as a diplomat makes him familiar with the external factors, and has given him contact with sources of information denied to the routine enquirer. . . . Sell adds his extensive internal knowledge of Yugoslavia, a knowledge gained in the service of NGOs as well as the US State Department. This and his fluency in Serbo-Croat, gave him, as his footnotes show, access to publications and personalities not always available to those imposing policy from without. It is this combination which enables Sell to tell us a good deal not only about the murderer and his wife, but also about their victim, Yugoslavia. . . . Sell has produced a book which will be valued by students of Yugoslavia and will be an excellent introduction to those not yet familiar with that country's tragic destruction. -- Richard Crampton * TLS *
[A] useful and also highly readable addition to our ever-growing shelf of scholarly studies. . . . [An] excellent book. -- Dennison Rusinow * Slavic Review *