About This Book
A first-person memoir records an extended stay in the nascent Soviet state, combining eyewitness anecdotes with analytical chapters on political and social change. The narrator describes urban scenes of poverty, disrupted military life, and the visibility of revolutionary forces, while following the rise of revolutionary security institutions, episodes of arrests and terror, and attempts to consolidate power. The account examines housing, food supply, peasant conditions, and ideological shifts as Bolshevik rule moves toward communism, offering a ground-level portrait of institutional transformation, everyday hardship, and the social consequences of revolutionary governance.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
"1683-1920" / The Fourteen Points and What Became of Them—Foreign Propaganda in the Public Schools—Rewriting the History of the United States—The Espionage Act and How It Worked—"Illegal and Indefensible Blockade" of the Central Powers—1,000,000 Victims of Starvation—Our Debt to France and to Germany—The War Vote in Congress—Truth About the Belgian Atrocities—Our Treaty with Germany and How Observed—The Alien Property Custodianship—Secret Will of Cecil Rhodes—Racial Strains in American Life—Germantown Settlement of 1683 and a Thousand Other Topics
by Frederick Franklin Schrader
"1812"
by Vasilïĭ Vasilʹevich Vereshchagin
"Barbarous Soviet Russia"
by Isaac McBride
"Brother Bosch", an Airman's Escape from Germany
by Gerald Featherstone Knight
"Monsieur Henri": A Foot-Note to French History
by Louise Imogen Guiney
"My country, 'tis of thee!" / Or, the United States of America; past, present and future. A philosophic view of American history and of our present status, to be seen in the Columbian exhibition.
by Willis Fletcher Johnson





