Book Reviews

Lenin's Tomb.
The Last Days of the Soviet Empire
by David Remnick. 1993/2001.
Read by Michael Prichard. Books on Tape, Inc. Vol. 1: #5595A,
11 - 1.5 hr. tapes, $88.00. 0-7366-6725-3. Vol. 2: #5595B,
10 1.5hr. tapes, $80.00.0-7366-6726-1. Sturdy vinyl binder; brief plot note.

David Remnick, an American journalist with roots in Russia, reported on the period from 1989-1994, the time of transition from communism to today's rather unstable democracy. At home in the Russian language and culture, he was able to poke about and travel and speak with persons great and clearly not so great. He pulls together many essays from his journalistic writing in this book, which I listened to in audiobook form. The people he interviewed and the observations he made make for a fascinating view of what Russia was like across this period. Lest the title confuse, the whole of the Soviet Union was "Lenin's Tomb."

Some of the chapters:

Throughout the book, the KGB lurks, ready with its Black Mariahs to grab someone and take them to interrogation or torture or worse. Remnick describes the circumstances under which large numbers of persons would be executed assembly-line style, with a bullet to the head. An apron on the drunken executioner would shield him from the blood. While Remnick was doing his reporting, the KGB made an attempt to improve public relations using western PR methods. Nobody took the new image very seriously.

Yeltsin and Gorbachev come across clearly as they lead the effort to overthrow the corrupt old system and replace it with representative democracy. Remnick respected those men, imperfect as they were, for their leadership during extremely difficult times.

Remnick, perhaps, sees a brighter, more democratic future for the Soviet Union than materialized during the years after 1994. His first-person account of what these years were like make this an excellent source for anyone curious about the process.

I have read two accounts by Germans from Russia who were traveling and visiting in the Soviet Union at the time the communists tried to regain control of the government (1991). One was by Timothy and Rosalinda Kloberdanz ("Thunder on the Steppe: Volga German Folklife in a Changing Russia") and the other by Rev. John Block ("Escape: Siberia to California: the 65 Year Providential Journey of Our Family"). Remnick's account fits very well with their experiences. There were no CNN reporters to tell the public what was going on; the media played classical music without comment on the most dangerous days, so they knew they were in big trouble. It was impossible for them to get a phone call out of the country. Later, they learned that the communists had large stashes of handcuffs and blank arrest warrants. Clearly, the communists were planning to play the early revolutionary years all over again. Good they were more clumsy than they had to be.

The reader of this audiobook, Michael Prichard, has a fine, mellifluous voice. This is the second audiobook with him as reader I have listened to, and he wears well over the hours. If you are interested in this book, try to borrow it in audiobook form. You may want to ask your local public library to get it. There are references to hundreds of persons and, for a non-Russian speaker, it would be easy to give up reading the book because of the difficulty of reading the names. Prichard has done it for you, so give him a chance to help you over this rough spot.

Review © 2003 by Edna Boardman


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