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Dmitri Volkogonov (1928–1995)

Author of Stalin: Triumph and Tragedy

17 Works 737 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Dmitri Volkogonov

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Volkogonov, Dmitri
Legal name
Dmitri Antonovich Volkogonov
Birthdate
1928-03-22
Date of death
1995-12-06
Gender
male
Nationality
Russia
Birthplace
Chita, Russia
Place of death
Moscow, Russia
Relationships
Villahermosa, Gilberto N. (student)

Members

Reviews

An in-depth look at how Stalin gained and kept power, one of the nastiest monsters the world has seen, who without the slightest regret instituted policies that he knew caused the needless torture and killing of tens of millions of his countrymen, who could value nothing except as it affected him personally. A paranoid whose chief attribute was an excellent memory, often used visciously, unjustly and lethally against his revolutionary comrades when they were of no further use to him. A man who rarely and reluctantly bothered to visit factories, farms or troops, content equally to deliver grand or detailed plans from his armchair and who for effect relied always first of all upon terror.

A good survey also of the Russian revolution of 1917 and preceding events. Good portraits of the more important Bolsheviks and their various fates at the hands of Stalin. Well-organized with information from many cited sources. Apparently an excellent translation.

The point of view is troubling. Much that happened within the USSR is not mentioned, such as anti-Jewish pogroms encouraged and ordered by Stalin. There is little or nothing about the sizable aid in food and military supplies shipped, at a high cost in western lives (U-boat sinkings) and goods, to Russia in World War II by the U.S. and Great Britain which likely saved hundreds of thousands of Soviets from starvation and additional battle losses in a prolonged war. Not mentioned is the forced building of cities and factories in Siberia at arbitrary and economically unsuitable locations resulting in continual drains on the rest of the economy.

There is discussion of the heroic work done in the Gulag (labs within prison grounds!) by wrongly imprisoned Russian scientists developing the A- and H-Bombs, but no hint that Russian spies in the U.S. and Great Britain had stolen detailed plans of both bombs several times over, so that the Russians had only to implement the discoveries made in the U.S. by the world's most brilliant scientists over a period of years and costing billions.

As the writer had access to secret Soviet files, it is remarkable that there is nothing about massive Russian spying the world over, particularly in the United States, some revealed by defecting spies and the extensive intercepts assembled by U.S. intellegence of covert coded Soviet espionage transmissions (the recently declassified Venona Project; see also Elizabeth Bentley, Whittaker Chambers and Igor Gouzenko) which eventually fingered Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter White, Julius Rosenberg and other highly placed U.S. (and British and Canadian) officials and scientists as Soviet spies who implemented and expoited numerous grave security breaches over many years. Other important subversive Soviet operations in other countries go unmentioned as well. All of this changed geopolitical balances and therefore the history of the 20th century.

In short, the author's research and book appear to have been tailored especially to satisfy a Russian view, and there was much else that I was interested in but did not find.
… (more)
 
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KENNERLYDAN | 1 other review | Jul 11, 2021 |
Written by a Russian general, it presupposes a lot of foreknoweledge of Russian and Leninist history. Jumps around from year to year with no clear "biographical" pattern.
½
 
Flagged
ORFisHome | 4 other reviews | Jul 13, 2009 |
Amazingly detailed, this book gives the reader a morbidly fascinating account of one of history's most remarkable political careers. It is a heavy going though.
½
 
Flagged
Devatipan | 1 other review | Jul 7, 2009 |
Written by a Russian general, it presupposes a lot of foreknoweledge of Russian and Leninist history. Jumps around from year to year with no clear "biographical" pattern.
 
Flagged
IFREF | 4 other reviews | Apr 25, 2007 |

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Statistics

Works
17
Members
737
Popularity
#34,456
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
9
ISBNs
61
Languages
10
Favorited
1

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