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Reviews for Yeltsin's Russia And The West

 Yeltsin's Russia And The West magazine reviews

The average rating for Yeltsin's Russia And The West based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-08-16 00:00:00
2002was given a rating of 3 stars Denzil De Sousa
I was consistently impressed with this biography. The writing was well-developed and the content was well-researched. Nikita Khrushchev grew up a peasant and in rural poverty yet managed to climb to the apex of the Soviet hierarchy. His story is an interesting one and all the details along the way are anything but boring. His involvement in the Russian Civil War, the Ukrainian repression and forced famine of the 1930s, World War II, and surviving alongside Stalin are all incredibly interesting. Yet his dismissal left him feeling isolated, suffering from depression, and unfulfilled in his duties to leading the Soviet people. His memoirs even mentioned his suicidal thoughts as the result of being placed into obscurity, pg. 641 (which is something I never knew). His life was reduced to "No one needs me now." "What am I going to do without work?" pg. 621. Even his funeral was minimalized and the cemetery had a sign posted "Cemetery Closed For Cleaning" the day of his burial. Scholars have labeled him the buffoon, Stalin's pet, or the peasant simpleton. Yet he worked his way up the ladder, miraculously survived the Stalin regime, and became the the leader of the Soviet Union. This was a really good book in my opinion. This book also gives a lot of detail and information about the Ukraine, Ukrainianization vs Russification, and the Ukrainian politics (Ukrainian Central Committee, Ukrainian Communist Party) which I thought was good. I enjoyed reading this one. I would recommend it to anyone interested in Russian/Soviet politics and history. Thanks!
Review # 2 was written on 2014-10-24 00:00:00
2002was given a rating of 3 stars Ghada El Sayed
The war [WWII] traumatized Khrushchev: It drove him to smoke and to drink; it commanded more attention in his memoirs than almost any other subject, but he couldn't bring himself to read others' war memoirs in retirement. Yet the same war added several more medals to his collection. This was a well paced and meticulously researched biography that won the Pulitzer Prize in 2003. The lengthy section on the Cuban Missile Crisis was absolutely superb and the section on Khrushchev's downfall was equally superb and surprisingly sentimental ' enough to feel sorry for the man who unwittingly did more than anyone to bring the world to the brink of Nuclear War and left us with the disturbing legacy that is the Nuclear Arms race. Nikita Khrushchev was born a hundred miles south of Moscow in April of 1894. He lived with his mother and grandparents during his youth while his father worked in the mines. When Khrushchev turned fifteen he traveled more than 200 miles to work alongside his father in the mines and continued as a miner for several years. In 1914 came WWI. Khrushchev managed to avoid the fighting and joined the Communist Party in 1918. He then quickly rose through the ranks and became Stalin's man in charge of Moscow in the 1930's and then in Ukraine in the 1940's. During WWII he served as a commander and even fought at Stalingrad, though it horrified him. Upon Stalin's death in 1953 Khrushchev assumed the leadership of the Soviet Union ' outmaneuvering the other shocked candidates. From the get go he aimed to distance himself from the famines of the Stalin era and to be more approachable with the people. But he also wanted to promote military prowess and especially technology. He was not known as much of a planner but under his leadership the Soviet Union of the 1950's did achieve quite a bit in weapons research and actually eclipsed the U.S. in the initial phase of the Space Race. Khrushchev was the leader of the Soviet Union for twelve years ' the period we now consider to be the height of the Cold War. His reign ended less than two years after his humiliating capitulation to Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Politburo never forgave him for that embarrassment. He was forced into retirement and was stripped of his prized dacha on the Black Sea and his car. While he was given a pension, Khrushchev was not allowed to be written about it in the Soviet Press. He died six years later in 1971, a frustrated man. 5 stars. As far as biographies go this is about as good as it gets ' particularly for a subject that I initially had little interest in.


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