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Darkness at Noon by Arthur Koestler
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Darkness at Noon (The Modern Library)

by Arthur Koestler

Series: Koestler's Trilogy (book 2)

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1,770281,860 (4.01)51
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Macmillan Company (1941), Hardcover, 267 pages

Member:sollocks
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:Dystopian Fiction, Fiction, German Literature, Germany, Prison Narrative, Russia, 2009
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Knap, de definitieve afrekening met de Sovjetunie, en dat op een ogenblik dat nog half intellectueel Europa dweepte met de Sovjetunie. Onbegrijpelijk dat na Koestler Sartre nog bleef vasthouden aan het sovjetmodel. Literair geen absolute hoogvlieger, maar toch mooi uitgeschreven, met vooral knappe dialogen. ( )
  lamotm | Dec 16, 2009 |
Standard-issue novel about the Stalinian purges. The mataphysical stuff is just dreary but characterization is OK and pacing just fine. ( )
  Kuiperdolin | Nov 1, 2009 |
a heavy read, deep thought from the main character, narrator about what conditions are needed to have a democracy.
read this book 20 years ago and it really stuck deep into my mind. ( )
  aulap | Aug 23, 2009 |
Haunting account of Communist brutality and paranoia. Not to be read lightly or by anyone already suffering from depression! ( )
  neil9797 | Jun 16, 2009 |
Darkness at Noon takes on a lot: Koestler uses his condemned main character to highlight the ideological shift in the USSR from Leninism to Stalinism, to comment on communism and revolution in general, and to bring the reader inside the mind of a political prisoner. I was assigned this book as part of a 20th century European history course, and it was by far my favorite piece that we read. The novel offers dimension to the student of Soviet history, but is also just a great novel in and of itself. ( )
  k8_not_kate | May 25, 2009 |
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The cell door slammed behind Rubashov.
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Darkness at Noon

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0553265954, Mass Market Paperback)

This splendid novel is set in the tumultuous Soviet Union of the 1930s during the treason trials. Rubashov, the protagonist and a hero of the revolution, is arrested and jailed for things he has not done, though there is much about the current Soviet state that veered from his ideals as a revolutionary. His investigators, Ivanov and Gletkin, seek a public confession and interrogate him using a number of methods. Through the ordeal, Rubashov reaches an epiphany or two while his interrogators suffer the cruel fate of the Soviet machine. Darkness at Noon succeeds as political/historical novel, but even more so as a refreshing tale of the human spirit.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)

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