It All Started With Marx: An Irreverent History of Communism

by Richard Armour

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2 reviews
Imagine making light of the reign of Ivan the Terrible, the Russian Revolution and Stalin’s bloody purges. Well, more than 60 years ago Richard Armour not only imagined it but wrote a book about it, “It All Started With Marx.” All these years later, it remains a funny and, oddly enough, educational book.

Armour was, after all, an educator first and foremost. His students at the California college where he taught English knew him as Dr. Armour. So when he wrote his satirical books (or perhaps they should be called parodies of textbooks), he based his humor on facts, usually those found in other, more serious books on the same subjects. Like Mad magazine during its heyday, Armour informed about the very things he ridiculed.

Thus we show more find lines like this: “Marx did not live to complete ‘Das Kapital,’ nor have many readers lived to finish it.” The facts, then the gag, all in one neat sentence. Two pages later, commenting on the size of Russia, Armour writes, “From the earliest times the Russian has had plenty of elbow room, which explains why he puts his hands on his hips while dancing.”

Like Henny Youngman, a contemporary of Armour’s, he keeps the one-liners coming, one after another. Some fall flat, but they come so quickly that readers never breaks stride. If one gag isn’t funny, the next one will be.

Armour’s books on history, art, literature and a variety of other subjects were popular during the Fifties and Sixties. I discovered them when I was in high school. Much of what I read in them reenforced what I read in traditional textbooks. I missed “It All Started With Marx” back then. It was good to catch up with it now. It’s never too late to learn.
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A book poking fun at various Communist (Not socialist) figures would obviously make money at the height of the Cold War, and Mr. Armour obliged. As in the case of most political figures there are enough foibles for a reasonable piece of entrtainment. Nobody stands out at this distance.
½

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Grant, Campbell (Illustrator)

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1958
First words
Foreword: Once upon a time there was no such thing as Communism.
Most people identify the origin of Communism with Russia, unaware that it was invented by a German while he was in France.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)At least you could go to bed a night and wake up in the morning, secure in the knowledge of whom to hate.

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, History, General Nonfiction, Politics and Government
DDC/MDS
335.4Society, government, & cultureEconomicsSocialism and related systemsMarxian systems
LCC
DK42 .A7History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaRussia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet Republics – PolandHistory of Russia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet RepublicsHistory

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Reviews
2
Rating
(4.12)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2
ASINs
4