No posts, nothing, a ringing silence, then a plug for
Hallow Mass. Fancy a bit of seasonal scares and a boot in the butt to political correctness, give this horror-comedy tale a try.
Most of you may go away now as I intend to delve into things Stalinist.
My friend Dutch,
author and
raconteur, is moving after 35 years in Hollywood. I shared his dwelling for six of those years and remember the time as darn interesting. A ferocious reader, Dutch encouraged me to rummage through his book collection, an assortment mighty by any standard. Given our mutual love of history, I selected several books on a cheery little topic called
Stalinism.
As an appetizer, I re-read
Darkness at Noon. Arthur Koestler's fictional depiction of an old Red caught up in the meat-grinder of the
Moscow Show Trials teased the palate, preparing me for the historically nourishing:
The Great Terror: A Reassessment by Robert Conquest. Reviewer Larry Slawson says:
"[Conquest's} reliance on such a wide variety of sources, in turn makes [the] book feel both informative and very scholarly in its overall approach. Conquest also possesses a superior writing style that showcases itself time and again throughout each chapter. The end result is a historical work that reads more like a novel with its narrative-driven style."
I met
Robert Conquest at the LA Times Festival of Books back in 2003. He mentioned a certain pride in deducing the
terror's casualty figures. Considering the book was first released in 1968, I give the man mad respect. Back then, nothing emerged from the Soviet Union save weapons and propaganda, and several tank brigades for the
disobedient Czechs. Amazed was I by Conquest's accuracy as subsequent history would prove. (Sounded a bit like Yoda, did I.)
A break may be needed after "Terror." A stroll, a bit of fiction, I think.
Back to the table after my walk and right into a second Robert Conquest book,
Harvest of Sorrow. From a review at Barnes and Noble we learn that those harvested were peasants of the Soviet Union in 1932 - 33. Stalin caused:
"a "terror-famine," inflicted by the State on the collectivized peasants of the Ukraine and certain other areas by setting impossibly high grain quotas, removing every other source of food, and preventing help from outside—even from other areas of the Soviet Union—from reaching the starving populace. The death toll resulting from the actions described in this book was an estimated 14.5 million—more than teetotal number of deaths for all countries in World War I."
Quite the under reported slaughter, though the
New York Times reporter
Walter Duranty wrote that everything was just fine and, besides, who couldn't stand to lose a few pounds? That's why I was glad to discover a few years back that Anne Applebaum had written
Red Famine: Stalin's War on the Ukraine. Her book will constitute Stalinfest dessert as I look forward to encountering such new information as might have emerged since Conquest's 1986 book.
Anyone left reading? I thought not.