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Revolution 1989: The Fall Of The Soviet Empire
 
 

Revolution 1989: The Fall Of The Soviet Empire [Kindle Edition]

Victor Sebestyen
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)

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Review

Victor Sebestyen's vivid panoramic work is a fine account... the writing is taut, the scene-setting dramatic, giving the book an almost cinematic feel (Adam Lebor SUNDAY TIMES )

Sebestyen has made an excellent job of organising his disparate material, so that the reader can recapture, with the same sense of bafflement and elation, the events that made the Europe we live in - and after 20 years he can add understanding too. (Michael Fry SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY )

the tale fair rips along... a solid piece of storytelling of an exhillarating and enspiriting moment of history (Misha Glenny EVENING STANDARD )

Victor Sebestyen brilliantly pulls together the events that led to the fall of the Soviet empire... it still takes your breath away 20 years on. (Richard Beeston THE SPECTATOR )

digestible and entertaining (THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH )

pacy and vivid... a considerable achievement... [Sebestyen] is also a thoroughly professional writer with a gift not only for exposition but also evocation. (Anthony Howard DAILY TELEGRAPH )

a thrilling read... Sebestyen is good at sketching the leading players but he also succinctly conveys what life was like for the ordinary citizens (Christopher Sylvester DAILY EXPRESS )

Sebestyen has got the pace and the balance just right (THE SCOTSMAN )

rollicking mix of high drama and sordid reality... conventional history, spiced with telling quotations. (THE INDEPENDENT )

a compelling and illuminating account of a great drama in the history of our times which showed one again that ordinary men and women really can change the world. (Jonathan Dimbleby THE MAIL ON SUNDAY )

Sebestyen's strength is his sharp focus and racy prose... Here is history written like a Greek tragedy... In Revolution 1989 nothing is taken for granted until the last triumphant page. (Michael Binyon THE TIMES )

Sharp focus and racy prose capture the events and decisions that fed into the growing turmoil across Eastern Europe as the East German regime crumbled. (THE TIMES 'We're Reading' )

It's a complex story spanning many countries, but this exciting yet deeply researched work brings it impressively to life... compelling. (Simon Sebag Montefiore THE OBSERVER )

Revolution 1989 is a lucid primer on the background to, and events of that magical year. Sebestyen's narrative is clear, entertaining and sure-footed (Angus Macqueen THE GUARDIAN )

Victor Sebestyen's book is worth a dozen rehashes of World War II by Andrew Roberts and his clones... Sebestyen's record of the 1980s is a compelling, page-turning read. Finely edited by his publisher, his book is a precise step-by-step account of the high politics and the big-name political players in the years between the August 1980 strikes in Gdansk and the crumbling of the Berlin Wall nine years later (Denis Macshane TRIBUNE )

Vivid personal glimpses and striking details... Victor Sebestyen's book is full of sharp snapshots and crisp narrative (Timothy Garton Ash New York Review of Books )

Revolution 1989 is a superbly written and impressively documented chronicle of the year John Paul II described as an annus mirabilis... Sebestyen provides a vivid portrait of the Stalinist leaders and their endless cynicism (Vladimir Tismaneanu TLS )

a digestible and colourful history of that miraculous year (THE ECONOMIST )

Sebestyen's brilliantly written narrative unfolds in brief, gripping episodes (NEWSWEEK )

masterly handling of this complex and fast-moving story and its ever-changing cast (DAILY MAIL )

Sebestyen's writing is as exhilarating and powerfully emotional as the events he describes... In a narrative as intoxicating as it is intricate, Revolution 1989 not only encompasses the political confrontations which fomented revolt but uses brief, skilful vignettes of ordinary lives to recreate the world behind the Iron Curtain. (Lisa Hilton THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY )

a superb concise retelling of the collapse of the Soviet Empire... this book is superlative and an essential read for anyone wishing to understand the development of the EU since 1989. (JOURNAL OF THE LAW SOCIETY SCOTLAND )

Book Description

How the Soviet Union's European empire collapsed in a dizzying few months of revolutions that changed the world.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 995 KB
  • Print Length: 498 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0307387925
  • Publisher: Phoenix; Mass Market Paperback edition (30 July 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002U3CB84
  • Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #59,530 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read for anyone under 30 8 Aug 2009
Format:Hardcover
This a must read for anyone under 30 who will not remember the extraordinary events of 1989 when the whole world order changed with almost no bloodshed. This book reads like a thriller screen script and keeps you wanting to turn over page after page even though you know from the start that the tale has a happy ending. If you are feeling frustrated and depressed about world events this book shows how really important and major change occurred for the better for millions of people without recourse to war. Gorbachev set off the chain of events that led to the collapse of Communism - not be design but by accident - events veered out of his control and were taken up by a number of unlikely heroes - a Polish female crane driver and a carousing Czech playright are amongst a cast of amazing and colourful characters - stranger and much better than fiction
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
An impelling and informative account of the decline and fall of the Soviet Empire.

This book is a highly readable and impelling account of the decline and fall of the Soviet Empire in Eastern Europe. It is written in short and succinct chapters, most of which are of less than ten pages in length. The author's account dispenses with non-essential data and concentrates attention on the cardinal aspects of the subject, namely, the progressive disintegration of Soviet power and influence in the satellite countries of Eastern Europe: Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany (German Democratic Republic), Hungary, Poland and Romania. The origin of the debacle can be traced to a minor incident that occurred in the Lenin Shipyard, Gdansk, in August 1980. Anna Walentynowycz, a diminuative crane driver, was arrested for 'stealing' candle ends, to be melted down to make new candles, which were then to be used again to illuminate a shrine dedicated to forty-four 'martyrs' who had been killed during a crackdown in 1970. It was that incident, in particular, that led to the creation of the Solidarity movement, and that event subsequently resulted in the progressive formation of `democratic' governments in those countries in Eastern Europe to which reference has been made above.

The transformation that initially occurred in Eastern Europe, in general, can be likened to a cascade - an inexorable succession of events - which also had profound transformative effects within the Soviet Union itself. Those chapters that discuss the policies adopted by Mikhail Gorbachev - glasnost and perestroika - after he was elected General Secretary of the Communist Party, in March 1985, are of particular interest. Those policy initiatives encouraged Gorbachev to instruct the Eastern European dictators to take complete responsibility for their own domains, and not involve the Soviet Union in their internal, domestic affairs - either political or economic. Any further military action in Eastern Europe by the Soviet army would not to be contemplated. In the future each satellite would be obliged to resolve its own internal problems without recourse to the Soviet Union. Gorbachev quickly realised that the Soviet economy was no longer capable of underwriting the huge debts progressively accumulated by the bankrupt economies of Eastern Europe, particularly in view of the adverse economic effects of the Afghan venture. The sharp decrease in oil prices, during the middle 1980s, also had a serious, detrimental effect on the USSR's export earnings. Gorbachev was undoubtedly the most intelligent and the most effective President of the Soviet Union, and it was most unfortunate that he was superseded, in December 1991, by Boris Yeltsin.

This work comprises an excellent study of the economic, political and social consequences of dictatorship - 'the dictatorship of the proleteriat' - in accordance with the doctrine of Marxism- Leninism That doctrine, whatever merits it had, certainly served to create large-scale social debility within Eastern Europe for over half a century, and within the Soviet Union for more that seventy years. It is the `finest' system that man has created for the systemic creation of large-scale economic deprivation and poverty. Planned economies always produce long-term, chronic shortage of food and consumer goods, for reasons that have been extensively analysed by F A Hayek. The Soviet system certainly created an economy of chronic shortage.

Those who have a keen interest in the current NATO strategy in Afghanistan are recommended to study those chapters, in particular, which eloquently describe the consequences of the invasion of that domain by a large Soviet army in 1979. In this context the report written by The Russian General Staff, titled The Soviet Afghan War, How a Superpower Fought and Lost, Kansas 2002, and Butcher & Bolt: Two Hundred Years of Foreign Engagement in Afghanistan, David Loyn, London 2008 are required reading. Although the Soviet and NATO objectives differ to a marked extent, what is actually happening in the present appears to be replicating what happened to the Soviet army in the past. I read this book with ever-increasing interest and enthusiasm and can recommend it to other readers with an equal degree of enthusiasm. Stuart Hopkins
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A concise history lesson 26 Aug 2009
Format:Hardcover
I bought this book as I had lived through these times and all the preceding events leading up to the final collapse of the East European systems. Up until then, people in the west were not well informed as to what was going on and, in consequence, developed a curiosity which, in my case, has been fulfilled by this excellent book. It is written in such a way that each chapter is a short history in its own right. Highly recommended

Alistair Macpherson
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Clear history of the fall of Communism
Really enjoyed reading an excellent description of events that I watched from afar. Recommended if you ever lived in Europe in the 80's.
Published 2 months ago by Brian Hill
4.0 out of 5 stars OMG!
My partner loves this type of read! Personally i can't think of much worse! But he loved it so there you are!
Published 5 months ago by Mrs. G. K. Rosemurgey
5.0 out of 5 stars Demise of an Empire.....
Communist Eastern Europe fell for one reason only: The Soviets were no longer prepared to support it. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Mr. D. J. Walford
4.0 out of 5 stars An excellent account ruined by poor formatting
To begin with the positives, this is a very good all-round account of the historic events of 1989 in Eastern Europe and the decades leading up to them. Read more
Published 14 months ago by I. R. Cragg
5.0 out of 5 stars A series of fantastic history lessons!
This is the most compulsive page-turner I've read for a very long time, and that's not something I was expecting to say about a weighty book covering an era which I thought I... Read more
Published 15 months ago by SL-N/1973
5.0 out of 5 stars Magisterial
I cannot praise this book highly enough. It is a fascinating and gripping account of an extraordinary time in European hisory.
Published 17 months ago by Jo Lincoln
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
If you are interested in the fall of the Soviet Empire you will love this book. A very readable account of how the Eastern European communist states collapsed one by one.
Published 17 months ago by peterpan price
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read about distant echoes from a recent past
"1989" by Victor Sebestyen tells the story of the collapse of Communism in Europe. It focuses on the main events and key players in the Soviet Union and the six Warsaw Pact... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Basileus
3.0 out of 5 stars Lurid and sensational, but not much analysis...
Sebestyen's account of the events of 1989 came out at the same time as a number of others, 20 years afte the events they describe, and together they make possible putting together... Read more
Published on 16 Jan 2011 by Dr. G. SPORTON
5.0 out of 5 stars A history that cracks along with the pace of a Cold War thriller
Living history is a bit of a cliche, but it's nevertheless an extraordinary thing to read through an era that at once seems so far away, but which one also lived through. Read more
Published on 19 Dec 2010 by J A C Corbett
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