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Paperback Dispatches from the Revolution: Russia 1916-1918 Book

ISBN: 0822320738

ISBN13: 9780822320739

Dispatches from the Revolution: Russia 1916-1918

A special correspondent for the Manchester Guardian , Morgan Philips Price was one of the few Englishmen in Russia during all phases of the Revolution. Although his Bolshevik sympathies accorded him an insider's perspective on much of the turmoil, his reports were often heavily revised or suppressed. In Dispatches from the Revolution, Tania Rose collects for the first time Price's correspondence from Russia--official and unofficial, published and...

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Real time dispatches from a Western socialist in Russia

This is a very fun book. You are placed in the midst of the revolution. The observations are from someone very sympathetic to the Bolsheviks - whether this is a net plus or minus to the information is hard to know. Certainly it helped him gather information, but then what he reported was probably also affected not always in the best ways. As for the book itself, helpful introductions to each chapter supplement the dispatches, but the editor also cut a lot out. Some might have been unnecessary passages, but others seemed to be just for length and I would very much have preferred it be left in. I was often left wishing for the full piece and wondering how hard it would be to look up any published pieces in the library to get the full article. In any case, fun (and quick) read!

Bam! The world changes! New horizons open! And you are there!

Morgan Philips Price was a young reporter from England who wrote for the Manchester Guardian. He sympathized with the social movements in Russia and wanted to be in the midst of these historic changes. He reported on both the February and October revolutions and on the civil war that followed. He spoke Russian fluently and had some knowledge of the different peoples there. He speaks with peasants, workers and ...those who were high up as they fall from power. He captures the voices of Tartars and Georgians, farmers and soldiers and of farmers turned soldiers turned revolutionaries. His dispatches and letters show the transformations of the Russian people and of Price himself as all are swept up in this time of war and revolution. Central to this story is the rise of the Bolsheviks and their leader, Lenin, who Price first tends to disdain and dismiss, and soon respects and looks to as the only leader who can lead the people to make the first socialist revolution in history. Price's dispatches put you smack in the present tense of great changes and cause you to ponder these intense kinds of times (of war, repression, and widespread discontent) when abrupt leaps are the order of the day and seemingly ordinary, invisible and disposable people do extraordinary things. Price captures the joy of this liberating time as well as its many hardships and challenges. I also recommend: The Bolsheviks Come to Power by Alexander Rabinowitch Ten Days that Shook the World by John Reed What Is To Be Done by V I Lenin The End of a Stage - The Beginning of a New Stage by Bob Avakian
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