

Your local library most likely, it’s a fairly common book.
If you meant online, there are free pdfs available.
https://readsettlers.org/settlers.pdf
Here is an HTML version with a clickable table of contents.
Your local library most likely, it’s a fairly common book.
If you meant online, there are free pdfs available.
https://readsettlers.org/settlers.pdf
Here is an HTML version with a clickable table of contents.
Remember when the Irish presidents massive dog sauntered into an official meeting and the news and all of Reddit were fawning over the “adorable doggo”?
But when Putin’s old dog walks in, its a threat against all of Germany.
Colonel Vitaly Yurchenko, of the KGB. Defected to the US and revealed a massive amount of secrets related to KGB operations in the states, he gave this in exchange for a “new better life in the West”. In 3 months he became so disgusted by America that he redefected back to the Soviet Union, taking with him a massive cache of documents, files, and credentials that he tricked a young CIA officer into giving him.
On the morning of his escape, he convinced the same young CIA agent from before, that was tasked to stay with him, to take him to a Halloween parade in a city 5 miles from the Soviet embassy in Washington. There he called ahead to the embassy to say that he was coming, without anyone watching him noticing. Then lastly, he took the Agent to a restaurant, gave him the few thousand the CIA had given him, told him “I’m leaving now, I’ll see you soon—goodbye. If I don’t come back, it’s not your fault.” He then got up and walked to the Soviet embassy.
This blew up in the CIA’s face and created a massive scandal for Reagan’s administration, and a good, deeper look into this case can be found here. (It is a western source and biased, but it’s still hilarious at how they try and spin this CIA disaster)
At home in Belarus, and my time traveling and living in the Northeast and West Coast of the United States. I spend a lot of time in the political science part of libraries and I see it pretty commonly. Maybe not all small local libraries will carry it, but starting from a medium sized library, to large ones, its pretty common.
I have also never not seen Settlers in a university library, which are open to the public where I have been.