Books by Leon Trotsky
History of the Russian Revolution
by Leon Trotsky
It pretends analytic detachment, but is, in fact, a colossal vanity mirror, in which Trotsky examines his life’s work as he wishes others to examine it
“This is one of the books I read when I was starting to move into historical study. It’s a wonderful memoir of a childhood and young adulthood. Trotsky is a wonderful writer. I think he is one of the two great political writers of the 20th century, the other being Winston Churchill. But, as you move through the book, you get a very strong sense of a man who is justifying his own politics and his own career choices. He gets less and less attractive and less and less plausible as the first half of the book gives way to the second half. In that sense it was a very influential work for me because I started thinking that he was a very attractive man and I ended up thinking that he was a very unattractive politician whose self-justification for the terror and the dictatorship and the ultra centralist discipline that he imposed didn’t have much merit.” Read more...
The best books on Totalitarian Russia
Robert Service, Historian
Interviews where books by Leon Trotsky were recommended
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1
War and Peace
by Leo Tolstoy -

2
Life and Fate
by Vasily Grossman and translated by Robert Chandler -

3
The Brothers Karamazov
by Fyodor Dostoevsky -

4
The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov
by Vladimir Nabokov -

5
A Hero of Our Time
by Mikhail Lermontov & translator Vladimir Nabokov -

6
Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk
by Nikolai Leskov
Books by Russian Authors
Books by Russian Authors
From the Enlightenment onwards, Russian authors have produced a vast and influential literary canon, including historic epics, absurdist classics, and tortured reflections on the human condition. Russia’s political turmoil also led to the writing of many moving memoirs and political works that sought to find solutions in spite of censorship and, for some authors, exile.
The best books on Totalitarian Russia, recommended by Robert Service
Robert Service, Professor of Russian Studies at Oxford, when forced to choose between Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin, says Stalin was definitely the worst of the lot. He takes a look at the dynamics of totalitarian Russia, gleaning insights from Thucydides to Orwell.
The best books on The Russian Revolution, recommended by Roland Chambers
The Russian revolution was the beginning of the modern age, says award-winning author Roland Chambers. He tells us what Solzhenitsyn imagined Lenin was like, and about the children’s author who led a double life as a spy in Bolshevik Russia.















