Communism: A History

· Modern Library chronicles Book 7 · Sold by Modern Library
3.4
9 reviews
eBook
192
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

From one of our greatest historians, a magnificent reckoning with the modern world's most fateful idea.

With astonishing authority and clarity, Richard Pipes has fused a lifetime's scholarship into a single focused history of Communism, from its hopeful birth as a theory to its miserable death as a practice.

At its heart, the book is a history of the Soviet Union, the most comprehensive reorganization of human society ever attempted by a nation-state. Drawing on much new information, Richard Pipes explains the countryís evolution from the 1917 revolution to the Great Terror and World War II, global expansion and the Cold War chess match with the United States, and the regime's decline and ultimate collapse. There is no more dramatic story in modern history, nor one more crucial to master, than that of how the writing and agitation of two mid-nineteenth-century European thinkers named Marx and Engels led to a great and terrible world religion that brought down a mighty empire, consumed the world in conflict, and left in its wake a devastation whose full costs can only now be tabulated.

Ratings and reviews

3.4
9 reviews
Lukas Linhart
25 July 2013
Even coming from post-communist country I found a lot of new information. This book is delivering a great big picture on the whole experiment with communism and knowing myself quite some stuff about the era and what it was like, I really enjoyed this book. It is awful that you can still here that "it wasn't that bad.... and if only it was back". If you really want to get broader understanding on what happened, this book is perfect. And also very readable!!
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A Google user
20 February 2012
If you love anti-communist diatribe, you will love this book. This remains the one book in my entire life that I have ever bought, read, then insisted on returning for a refund. Even if you want to argue that he has a point in various aspects of history, the fact that the entire book is written in a style of a massive appeal to emotion destroys any credibility this work could have. I advise students of history and ideology to pass on this book.
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About the author

Richard Pipes, Baird Professor of History, Emeritus, at Harvard University, is the author of numerous books and essays, including The Russian Revolution, Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime, and Property and Freedom. In 1981-82 he served as President Reagan's National Security Council adviser on Soviet and East European affairs, and in 1992 he was an expert witness in the Russian Constitutional Court's trial against the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Chesham, New Hampshire.

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