Russia in 1919


Gelesen von Expatriate

(4.6 stars; 30 reviews)

PUBLISHER'S NOTE: On August 27, 1914, in London, I made this note in a memorandum book: "Met Arthur Ransome at_____'s; discussed a book on the Russian's relation to the war in the light of psychological background--folklore." The book was not written but the idea that instinctively came to him pervades his every utterance on things Russian. The versatile man who commands more than respect as the biographer of Poe and Wilde; as the (translator of and commentator on Remy de Gourmont; as a folklorist, has shown himself to be consecrated to the truth. The document that Mr. Ransome hurried out of Russia in the early days of the Soviet government (printed in the New Republic and then widely circulated as a pamphlet), was the first notable appeal from a non-Russian to the American people for fair play in a crisis understood then even less than now. The British Who's Who--that Almanach de Gotha of people who do things or choose their parents wisely--tells us that Mr. Ransome's recreations are "walking, smoking, fairy stories." It is, perhaps, his intimacy with the last named that enables him to distinguish between myth and fact and that makes his activity as an observer and recorder so valuable in a day of bewilderment and betrayal. - Summary by B. W. Huebsch (4 hr 15 min)

Kapitel

Prefatory Notes 8:03 Gelesen von Expatriate
To Petrograd 12:49 Gelesen von Expatriate
Smolni 7:39 Gelesen von Expatriate
Petrograd to Moscow 5:18 Gelesen von Expatriate
First Days in Moscow 20:15 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Executive Committee on the Reply to the Prinkipo Proposal 21:53 Gelesen von Expatriate
Kamenev and the Moscow Soviet 7:24 Gelesen von Expatriate
An Ex-Capitalist 9:11 Gelesen von Expatriate
A Theorist of Revolution 5:15 Gelesen von Expatriate
Effects of Isolation 3:17 Gelesen von Expatriate
An Evening At the Opera 7:26 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Committee of State Constructions 13:04 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Executive Committee & the Terror 9:27 Gelesen von Expatriate
Notes of Conversations With Lenin 7:20 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Supreme Council of Public Economy 9:11 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Race With Ruin 7:03 Gelesen von Expatriate
A Play of Chekhov 4:07 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Centro-Textile 8:17 Gelesen von Expatriate
Modification in the Agrarian Programme 2:28 Gelesen von Expatriate
Foreign Trade & Munitions of War 3:26 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Proposed Delegation From Berne 5:19 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Executive Committee on the Rival Parties 10:28 Gelesen von Expatriate
Commissariat of Labour 9:50 Gelesen von Expatriate
Education 11:03 Gelesen von Expatriate
A Bolshevik Fellow of the Royal Society 2:43 Gelesen von Expatriate
Digression 2:04 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Opposition 20:33 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Third International 11:43 Gelesen von Expatriate
Last Talk With Lenin 6:53 Gelesen von Expatriate
The Journey Out 2:03 Gelesen von Expatriate

Bewertungen


(4 stars)

A very positive account of the Bolsheviks, probably written to ensure continued access to Bolshevik leaders. Lots of interesting details , fortunately in short chapters so one does not get bogged down. Clearly read by Expatriate. Worth the quick read if you are interested in this period of history.

great narration, great book


(5 stars)

I've been wanting to learn more about the history of the Russian revolution, and what better way than with a first hand account as an outsider journalist. I loved it, each chapter ended sooner than I wanted


(5 stars)

fantastic insight into the Russia of the time. amazing access to some of the key architects or conspirators if you will all of the revolution

very interesting


(4 stars)

very interesting snapshot of a tumultuous time. well read.


(5 stars)

Well read, and a fascinating look at post-Revolution Russia.