Taubman writes well, seems to have interviewed those Soviet figures still living, and doesn't force his conclusions. He reports differing assessments from friends and foes, including a number of people who began as allies and ended disappointed and disaffected.
I, as I suspect most American readers would be, was most interested in his foreign policy and dealings with other world leaders. He got on well with his counterparts, from Thatcher and Reagan, Mitterand and Kohl, to Bush. The glimpse of Thatcher through Soviet eyes was particularly interesting. Taubman's assessment of the Bush approach to Gorbachev is mixed: Bush's personality and upbringing meant he eased Gorbachev's way, but it also meant he perhaps missed a chance to push events in a better direction, one which might have averted our current state of hostility between Russia and the U.S., but who knows?
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