Lenin's Embalmers
by Ilya Zbarsky, Samuel Hutchinson
On This Page
Description
Between 1924 and the fall of communism in 1991, many millions of visitors paid their respects to the embalmed body of Lenin in Red Square. This is the story of the mausoleum, told by the only survivor of the family that plunged the founder of the Soviet Union into a solution of glycerine and potassium acetate to preserve him forever.Tags
Recommendations
Member Recommendations
Member Reviews
Lenin's Embalmers is a fascinating microcosm of the early Soviet state, the scientific project of preserving the great leader, and the sudden swings of fortune that accompanied the political winds of the time. Ilya's father Boris Zbarsky was a a Jewish socialist and scientist, who in 1924 became one of the men responsible for the care of Lenin's body. A consummate political player, Boris navigated the turbulent 30s and 40s, doing well through war and family while alternately favoring and dominating his son, the author of this book. Ilya describes the shambles of the educational system in the 30s, the nightmare of disappearances under the KGB, the opulent lives of the elite, and the stunning poverty that he lived in as his family fell show more out of favor.
The mine line of the story ends in 1952, as the Jewish Zbarsky's found themselves on the wrong side of Stalin's paranoia. Fortunately, Stalin died before Boris could be executed, but they still lost their role in Lenin's masoleum and the Soviet scientific system. Ilya survived somehow through the 90s when he wrote this book, and it ends with a little retrospective about preserving other socialist leaders, and then turning to the private sector of dead Russian gangsters.
Over all, a small but fascinating book on a topic easily overlooked. show less
The mine line of the story ends in 1952, as the Jewish Zbarsky's found themselves on the wrong side of Stalin's paranoia. Fortunately, Stalin died before Boris could be executed, but they still lost their role in Lenin's masoleum and the Soviet scientific system. Ilya survived somehow through the 90s when he wrote this book, and it ends with a little retrospective about preserving other socialist leaders, and then turning to the private sector of dead Russian gangsters.
Over all, a small but fascinating book on a topic easily overlooked. show less
A strange little memoir about the son of the man who worked closely on the original embalming of Lenin's body. The author also worked on the medical team that was tasked with caring for Lenin's immortal remains. Through his eyes, the reader experiences the fearful life under Stalin's regime and the extremely dangerous existence of a scientist.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
All Things Russia
459 works; 11 members
Weirdo Nonfiction
138 works; 3 members
Author Information
1 Work 155 Members
1 Work 155 Members
Some Editions
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 155
- Popularity
- 210,637
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.58)
- Languages
- 5 — English, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 2


































































