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$25.00

Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    0674022580
  • ISBN-13:
    9780674022584
  • PUB. DATE:
    October 2006
  • PUBLISHER:
    Harvard University Press
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Stalin: A Biography by Robert Service

$25.00 List Price
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Customer Reviews

very good book about stalinby quaylofsik_1917

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i really like this book it told things about stalin that i never thought it would have, such as his child hood with his drunk bastard of a father and his mother who may have been sleeping around. it also shows why he didnt like capitalism and show what lead him to become makings of a communist super power. It also showed other things that were going on around him, like the state of the empire while...

Stalin: A biographyby Anonymous

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Robert Service does an outstanding job of writing out the life of Joseph Stalin. Though much of the book's information comes from the memoirs of Trotsky and Krushchev, this is a well written biography. Not only does does Service focus on Stalin, but he also brings into account of major influences in his life such as Lenin, Churchill, Roosevelt, and his own party elite.

STALIN THE INSIDE STORYby Anonymous

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I SAW ROBERT SERVICE ON TV BEING INTERVIEWED FOR HIS BOOK'STALIN' AND HAD TO GO OUT AND BUY HIS BOOK RIGHT AWAY. HE HAD DONE ALOT OF RESEARCH AND DOCUMENTATION ON STALINS LIFE INCLUDING NEVER BEFORE SEEN FILES THAT WERE UNCOVERED FROM THE SOVIET VAULTS. IT WAS REALLY INTRESTING TO FIND OUT HOW STALIN READ ALOT AND WROTE IN THE MARGIN. THIS IS THE NEWEST BOOK ON STALIN BY ROBERT SERVICE MIGHT SHED SOME...

Overview -

Stalin

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: October 2006
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Sales Rank: 154,902

Synopsis

Overthrowing the conventional image of Stalin as an uneducated political administrator inexplicably transformed into a pathological killer, Robert Service reveals a more complex and fascinating story behind this notorious twentieth-century figure. Drawing on unexplored archives and personal testimonies gathered from across Russia and Georgia, this is the first full-scale biography of the Soviet dictator in twenty years.

Service describes in unprecedented detail the first half of Stalin's life—his childhood in Georgia as the son of a violent, drunkard father and a devoted mother; his education and religious training; and his political activity as a young revolutionary. No mere messenger for Lenin, Stalin was a prominent activist long before the Russian Revolution. Equally compelling is the depiction of Stalin as Soviet leader. Service recasts the image of Stalin as unimpeded despot; his control was not limitless. And his conviction that enemies surrounded him was not entirely unfounded.

Stalin was not just a vengeful dictator but also a man fascinated by ideas and a voracious reader of Marxist doctrine and Russian and Georgian literature as well as an internationalist committed to seeing Russia assume a powerful role on the world stage. In examining the multidimensional legacy of Stalin, Service helps explain why later would-be reformers—such as Khrushchev and Gorbachev—found the Stalinist legacy surprisingly hard to dislodge.

Rather than diminishing the horrors of Stalinism, this is an account all the more disturbing for presenting a believable human portrait. Service's lifetime engagement with Soviet Russia has resulted in the most comprehensive and compelling portrayal of Stalin to date.

The New York Times - William Grimes

Stalin, a sequel to Mr. Service's Lenin: A Biography, presents a richly documented, highly persuasive portrait of the man who transformed the Soviet Union into a modern military-industrial power, terrorized millions and ruled over an empire that would have been the envy of the czars. Mr. Service writes in a colorless, often plodding prose. He is often repetitive. His book lacks the verve, and the penetrating psychology, of William Taubman's Pulitzer Prize-winning Khrushchev: The Man and His Era (W. W. Norton). But brick by brick, Mr. Service constructs a solid, accessible work that does as much as one book can to explain Stalin as a human being, and as the architect of a system that still weighs heavy on millions of citizens in the former Soviet Union.

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Biography

Robert Service is a Fellow of the British Academy and Professor of Russian History at Oxford University.