Lenin the Dictator

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9781474601054

Price: £14.99

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‘A fresh, powerful portrait of Lenin’ Anne Applebaum, author of Red Famine
‘Richly readable … An enthralling but appalling story’ Francis Wheen, author of Karl Marx

The cold, one-dimensional figure of Lenin the political fanatic is only a partial truth. Drawing on extensive material that has only recently become available, Sebestyen’s gripping biography casts an intriguing new light on the character behind the politics.

In reality, Lenin was a man who loved nature as much as he loved making revolution, and his closest relationships were with women. He built a state based on terror. But he was a highly emotional man given to furious rages and deep passions. While never ignoring the politics, Sebestyen examines Lenin’s inner life, his relationship with his wife and his long love affair with Inessa Armand, the most romantic and beguiling of Bolsheviks. These two women were as significant as the men – Stalin or Trotsky – who created the world’s first Communist state with him.

Reviews

Victor Sebestyen brings the man's complexities to life in Lenin the Dictator, balancing personality with politics in succinct and readable prose ... Sebestyen describes particularly keenly how this ruthless, domineering, often vicious man depended on three women to sustain him
David Reynolds, NEW STATESMAN
In this new biography, Victor Sebestyen gives a vivid and rounded picture of Lenin the man ... Sebestyen brings to the task a gift for narrative and for describing his rich cast of characters
Margaret MacMillan, THE OLDIE
In this insightful biography, Sebestyen examines the brilliant but ruthless personality whom journalists glorified and shows why the dictatorial government that Lenin imposed on his country made a nationwide cult of personality inevitable ... Readers see a great historical tragedy play out, however, as Russia's dying Red Tsar leaves his most bloody-minded lieutenant in prime position to take over the brutal police state he has forged. A compelling portrait of an epoch-making figure
Bryce Christensen, BOOKLIST starred review
The story of the Bolshevik revolution is fascinating in several ways, and Sebestyen does a good job of telling it ... entertaining
Tibor Fischer, STANDPOINT
Victor Sebestyen does an impressive job of telling Lenin's life story ... it is a highly readable overview
Evan Mawdsley, BBC HISTORY MAGAZINE
An enthralling portrait of one of the key figures of the 20th century
MAIL ON SUNDAY </i>Summer Books<i>
In his engagingly written biography the author ... captures all the drama of Lenin's leadership against a background of imperial collapse, the ravages of war and the building of a dictatorship ... the Bolshevik leader emerges from these pages as a man unencumbered by critical self-awareness, by doubts or by any moral conflict over the extraordinary costs inflicted on others by the pursuit of his revolutionary goals
Daniel Beer, GUARDIAN
An accessible, fair and marvellously written biography that reinforces what we have learned in the past three decades ... For anyone interested in an introduction to the world's greatest revolutionary that draws on the latest research, Mr Sebestyen's Lenin would be the place to start
Douglas Smith, WALL STREET JOURNAL
The attention to detail is flawless
Alex Larman, THE OBSERVER
An excellent, original and compelling portrait of Lenin as man and leader
Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of <i>STALIN: THE COURT OF THE RED TSAR</i>
An excellent new biography
Saul David, EVENING STANDARD
Richly readable ... enthralling but appalling
Francis Wheen, MAIL ON SUNDAY
Page-turning and enlightening
Victoria Hislop
A fresh and powerful portrait of Lenin, and at just the right time. As Bolshevik ideas and tactics return to world politics, Victor Sebestyen focuses our attention on the man who invented them
Anne Applebaum, author of <i>RED FAMINE: STALIN'S WAR ON UKRAINE</i>
Can first-rate history read like a thriller? With Lenin the Dictator the journalist Victor Sebestyen has pulled off this rarest of feats. How did he do it? Start with a Russian version of House of Cards and behold Vladimir Ilyich Lenin pre-empt Frank Underwood's cynicism and murderous ambition by 100 years. Add meticulous research by digging into Soviet archives, including those locked away until recently. Plow through 9.5 million words of Lenin's Collected Works. Finally, apply a scriptwriter's knack for drama and suspense that needs no ludicrous cliffhangers to enthrall history buffs and professionals alike
Josef Joffe, NEW YORK TIMES