Peter Bryant (1) (1924–1966)
Author of Red Alert
For other authors named Peter Bryant, see the disambiguation page.
Peter Bryant (1) has been aliased into Peter George.
About the Author
Image credit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_George_%28author%29
Works by Peter Bryant
Works have been aliased into Peter George.
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Peter Bryan George
- Birthdate
- 1924-04-24
- Date of death
- 1966-06-01
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- Flight Lieutenant
navigator - Birthplace
- Treorchy, UK
- Place of death
- Hastings, UK
Members
Reviews
"Nucular combat toe to toe with the Russkies". Red Alert is the book that Dr. Strangelove was based on. The only thing is that the book is not a comedy, not even a black comedy. Red Alert is a book written in the 1950s in the Cold War period about the US/Soviet stand-off. This book is played for real.
It's not a great book, but a good flashback to the mood of the Cold War. It's interesting that Stanley Kubrick took this book as his starting point. He exaggerated the themes of the book to show more construct his black comedy. It didn't take much. The logic of General Quinten (General Ripper in the movie) is something deeply rooted in the Cold War. A first strike made sense, within the logic of a death match between the US and the Soviet Union. And the movie, and the book, follow that logic to its conclusion. Not good.
There's no "Dr. Strangelove" in the book. He is a brilliant invention of Kubrick. The disturbing thing is that, without Strangelove, and without the exaggerations, the logic proceeds to its disastrous conclusion.
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" show less
It's not a great book, but a good flashback to the mood of the Cold War. It's interesting that Stanley Kubrick took this book as his starting point. He exaggerated the themes of the book to show more construct his black comedy. It didn't take much. The logic of General Quinten (General Ripper in the movie) is something deeply rooted in the Cold War. A first strike made sense, within the logic of a death match between the US and the Soviet Union. And the movie, and the book, follow that logic to its conclusion. Not good.
There's no "Dr. Strangelove" in the book. He is a brilliant invention of Kubrick. The disturbing thing is that, without Strangelove, and without the exaggerations, the logic proceeds to its disastrous conclusion.
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" show less
The true genius in this book is how Stanley Kubrick came up with Dr. Strangelove out of this story. Red Alert is a serious Cold War Doomsday novel much like Fail-Safe even with a similar ending. Kubrick follows Peter Bryant’s basic plot line but layers it with insane black humor to provide a bizarro-world take on the whole “duck-and-cover” life in the Sixties. Skip the book and go straight to the film.
An excellent, terrifying work. However, it is also one of the few writings which the movie based upon it surpassed it. Peter Bryant despite his intense pessimism, saw a way out: the world lived on, the bombs didn't go off, and Russia and America began working towards world peace.
Intense story of nuclear bombers headed for the Soviet Union and the mistaken outbreak of World War III. It was the source for Dr. Strangelove, which morphed into a very black comedy. This book plays everything straight, but will still entertain you with its doomsday scenario.
Statistics
- Works
- 1
- Members
- 317
- Popularity
- #74,564
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 12
- ISBNs
- 65
- Languages
- 2



