Kevin J. McNamara journeyed across eastern Siberia shortly after the collapse of the Soviet Union, where he first learned about the ad hoc army of former POWs that exploded onto the world stage in 1918. These Czech and Slovak legionnaires riveted the world’s attention in 1918 by unexpectedly seizing all of Siberia and nearly toppling Moscow’s new Bolshevik regime. The soldiers played a role in the First World War, Russian Revolution, Russian Civil War, Allied Intervention, the collapse of Austria-Hungary, the founding of Czecho-Slovakia, and the diplomacy that ended the war and re-wrote the map of Europe. Upon his return to the States, McNamara acquired and arranged to have translated more than 100 first-hand accounts by these legionnaires. Their personal stories were published in Prague in the 1920s in a five-volume work, "The Road to Resistance: How the Czech Legion Lived and Fought," but their accounts were suppressed after the Nazi and Soviet conquests of Czecho-Slovakia. No longer censored following the collapse of communist rule, these first-hand accounts had never before been rendered into English. Public Affairs, LLC, a unit of The Perseus Books Group, published "Dreams of a Great Small Nation: The Mutinous Army that Threatened a Revolution, Destroyed an Empire, Founded a Republic, and Remade the Map of Europe" on March 29, 2016. Perseus Books was subsequently sold to the Hachette Book Group. McNamara’s agent is Glen Hartley of Writers' Representatives, LLC. The book tells the story of 50-65,000 émigrés, deserters, and POWs from Austria-Hungary and its army who are cast adrift inside Russia at the end of the Great War. Lost amidst the Russian Revolution and Moscow's withdrawal from the war, these Czechs and Slovaks – long oppressed by the rulers of their Austro-Hungarian homelands – are organized by a fugitive professor from Prague, Tomas G. Masaryk, into an ad hoc army. They switch loyalties from Austria-Hungary, to the Western Allies in return for an independent nation of their own. Their search for a safe passage to Allied France leads them on a perilous journey across Siberia, where an altercation leads to a brawl that launches one of the wildest mis-adventures in modern history. A former journalist and bureau chief for Calkins Media Inc. and aide to U.S. Congressman R. Lawrence Coughlin, McNamara is a Non-Resident Fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, Philadelphia, and a former contributing editor to its journal, "Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs." He earned a B.A. in journalism and M.A. in international politics from Temple University, where he studied under military historian Russell F. Weigley. He holds a certificate in national security law from the University of Virginia Law School. His writings have been translated into Czech, Russian, and Slovak. He lives in Glenside, PA.
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