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Gulag: A History of the Soviet Camps Paperback – 29 Apr 2004

4.2 out of 5 stars 76 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 624 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin; New Ed edition (29 April 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0140283102
  • ISBN-13: 978-0140283105
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 2.7 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (76 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 16,857 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

"An important book. . . . It is fervently to be hoped that people will read Anne Applebaum's excellent, tautly written, and very damning history." --"The New York Times Book Review ""The most authoritative--and comprehensive--account of this Soviet blight ever published by a Western writer." --"Newsweek ""A titanic achievement: learned and moving and profound. . . . No reader will easily forget Applebaum's vivid accounts of the horrible human suffering of the Gulag." --"National Review ""A tragic testimony to how evil ideologically inspired dictatorships can be." -"The New York Times ""Lucid, painstakingly detailed, never sensational, it should have a place on every educated reader's shelves." -"Los Angeles Times ""Magisterial. . . . Certain to remain the definitive account of its subject for years to come. . . . An immense achievement." --"The New Criterion ""An excellent account of the rise and fall of the Soviet labor camps between 1917 and 1986. . . . A splendid book." --"The New York Review of Books ""Should become the standard history of one of the greatest evils of the 20th century." --"The Economist" "Thorough, engrossing . . . A searing attack on the corruption and the viciousness that seemed to rule the system and a testimonial to the resilience of the Russian people. . . . Her research is impeccable." -"San Francisco Chronicle" "An affecting book that enables us at last to see the Gulag whole. . . . A valuable and necessary book." -"The Wall Street Journal" "Ambitious and well-documented . . . Invaluable . . . Applebaum methodically, and unflinchingly, provides a sense of what it was like to enter and inhabit the netherworld of theGulag." -"The New Yorker""[Applebaum's] writing is powerful and incisive, but it achieves this effect through simplicity and restraint rather than stylistic flourish. . . . [An] admirable and courageous book." -"The Washington Monthly" "Monumental . . . Applebaum uses her own formidable reporting skills to construct a gripping narrative." -"Newsday" "Valuable. There is nothing like it in Russian, or in any other language. It deserves to be widely read." -"Financial Times" "A book whose importance is impossible to exaggerate. . . . Magisterial . . . Applebaum's book, written with such quiet elegance and moral seriousness, is a major contribution to curing the amnesia that curiously seems to have affected broader public perceptions of one of the two or three major enormities of the twentieth century." -"Times Literary Supplement" "A truly impressive achievement . . . We should all be grateful to [Applebaum]." -"The Sunday Times" (London) "A chronicle of ghastly human suffering, a history of one of the greatest abuses of power in the story of our species, and a cautionary tale of towering moral significance . . . A magisterial work, written in an unflinching style that moves as much as it shocks, and that glistens with the teeming life and stinking putrefaction of doomed men and rotten ideals." -"The Daily Telegraph "(London) "No Western author until Anne Applebaum attempted to produce a history of the Gulag based on the combination of eyewitness accounts and archival records. The result is an impressively thorough and detailed study; no aspect of this topic escapes her attention. Well written, accessible...enlightening for both the general reader andspecialists." --"The New York Sun""For the raw human experience of the camps, read Solzhenitsyn's "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" or Irina Ratushinskaya's "Grey is the Color of Hope," For the scope, context, and the terrible extent of the criminality, read this history." --"Chicago Tribune"

From the Inside Flap

The Gulag--a vast array of Soviet concentration camps that held millions of political and criminal prisoners--was a system of repression and punishment that terrorized the entire society, embodying the worst tendencies of Soviet communism. In this magisterial and acclaimed history, Anne Applebaum offers the first fully documented portrait of the Gulag, from its origins in the Russian Revolution, through its expansion under Stalin, to its collapse in the era of glasnost. Applebaum intimately re-creates what life was like in the camps and links them to the larger history of the Soviet Union. Immediately recognized as a landmark and long-overdue work of scholarship, Gulag is an essential book for anyone who wishes to understand the history of the twentieth century. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Paperback
One thing I will agree with other reviews on this book is that is certainly heavy going at times, but to counter this one must understand that the subject matter we are dealing with here is in itself very heavy going.
Anna Applebaum, I think, offers a reasonable balanced historical review of what was however one looks at is a tragedy of the human race. One review remarked that the statistics used in the book where way off the mark, stating the reported deaths at the hands of Stalin were far lower. Even at this lower amount I think we can all agree it was still a tragedy and to be honest genocide.
What shocked me most in the book was not the numbers though, and I would urge anyone who is going to read this to look past them and really try and delve into the human stories and aspects of the book - from all participants. Now you must be careful with any eye witness account as we all know but the stories that come out of this book are at times truly horrific.
I don't want anyone how reads this to think that the book glorifies the violence of the time, Applebaum actually deals with it quite sensitively and in truth doesn't spend a huge amount of time on it. That is what makes it horrific.
The vivid accounts of the treatment these prisons received belies believe and even having read in detail the practises I cannot begin to imagine what life must have been like during these times. Having feelings such as this after having finished reading is what makes the book as powerful as it is. No dramatics, no song and dance, just short accounts that could honestly make your toes curl.
I would hope that anyone reading this book is adult enough to make up their own mind and not to be swayed into changing their entire belief system over one book. If you don't believe areas of the book, read other books that I am sure will offer a different, and most certainly valid point. Take this for what it is and I hope from it you will learn something, just as I did.
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Format: Paperback
Anne Applebaum's 'Gulag' is a literary and historiographical vanguard. 'Gulag', at last, recognises the necessity for the acknowledgement and understanding of a political system that demanded the wholesale and tragically meaningless disownment and butchering of entire communities. Even entire races, when we consider, for example, Kruschev's hatred of, and intentions towards the Chechens; something trodden over and often overlooked in the haste with which some historians rush to appraise the figure of Stalin.
Applebaum writes at length about the needless suffering of the hundreds, thousands, and then millions, who were abused, starved, and worked to death daily, under the auspices of the Soviet camp system. Importantly, the individual punishing regimes implemented by the guards and commanders themselves are not ignored, although there is recognition that cruelty and criminality was not universal among them. Having said this, one need look no further for a vision of Hell itself, than to read the depictions of life aboard the transport ships which sailed between the Kamkatchka area and ports such as Vladivostok, built by Gulag labour.
The 'Gulag' itself has become an almost iconic term of oppression and dictatorial power in studies of twentieth century Russia, and what the reader witnesses in Applebaum's book, is the dragging of this Soviet holocaust into the light for all to see. Contrary to the opinions of the obviously misled and misread Mr Podmore, it is not socialism that is portrayed in such excruciatingly horrific detail, but a degenerative communist political system in the guise of Stalinism.
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By A Customer on 22 Nov. 2004
Format: Paperback
A powerfully engrossing and thought provoking boook in sharing the history and personal perspective (prisoner, criminal, jailor) etc of the Soviet Gulag system. Well researched and even balanced with countless notes, personal accounts. etc. A must read
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Format: Paperback
To the English reader who does not know the history of the camps, or who has not read the many memoirs published about them, this is a very useful survey. It gives a clear account of the origins and development of the Gulag system and uses the memoir literature to describe the organization of work and daily life within the camps, and to bring to life the suffering of the millions of people inside them. As with any general survey, there is a problem, however, with stereotyping - and this book is guilty on that score. It does not take account of the many different types of camps, not all quite the horror story presented uniformly in this book. And it tends to accept at face value the reminscences of the camp inmates, without questioning the extent to which their memoirs (written for the most part in the period after 1956) were accurate. Solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago is better in this sense, because it represents these memories in a direct way, as oral history, and that is still the best account of the Gulag.
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Interesting book but somehow the writing style didn't grab my attention as other books have! However that is not to detract from a very well researched and thorough account of the horrendous soviet camp system and the enourmous human suffering endured .
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