"A rewarding read." --Financial Times, "Best Summer Books of 2024"
"A very impressive new biography of Wallace by Benn Steil . . . A long-dead Vice President has much to teach us." --Forbes
"Timely, riveting . . . Historian Benn Steil's new biography should be read right now." --George F. Will, The Washington Post
"American history--and world history--could have turned out very differently if just a few things had gone the other way. Most notably, the U.S. after World War II might have pursued a pro-Soviet foreign policy, consigning Europe to Communist control, if President Franklin Roosevelt had died in the middle of his third term or if the 1944 Democratic National Convention had not dumped Vice President Henry Wallace for Harry Truman. How this counterfactual history came close to happening, and how it was prevented, is the subject of Benn Steil's definitive account, The World That Wasn't." --Wall Street Journal
"A groundbreaking biography . . . Benn Steil comes closer than anyone before him to unraveling the enigma of this visionary hybrid of feeling and fact." --Richard Norton Smith, Washington Free Beacon
"Benn Steil's new book, The World That Wasn't, demonstrates that Wallace would not have saved the United States from a rivalry with the Soviet Union. . . . But Steil highlights a larger lesson: It takes two to make peace. Through diplomacy, states can resolve conflicts, but if one actor will not relent, the options are appeasement or confrontation, not real peace." --Washington Examiner
"A rigorously researched and revelatory new Wallace biography." --New York Journal of Books
"A meticulous biography of Henry Wallace . . . Drawing on new materials from FBI and Soviet Union archives, Steil paints a vivid picture. . . . This is a rewarding dive into the inner workings of mid-century American government." --Publishers Weekly
"Benn Steil's engrossing account of Wallace's life and career is a timely cautionary tale and a masterpiece of 20th-century American history. It is the definitive biography of Henry A. Wallace, and all the previous hagiographies can finally be consigned to the irrelevance they so richly deserve." --Ronald Radosh, Quillette
"A brilliant and fascinating story of a charismatic and well-meaning leader undone by Soviet propaganda. The nation was lucky to have Harry Truman in position as VP when FDR died--but it was a near run thing. Exceptional history, engrossing story telling." --Admiral James Stavridis