Review
------
Anne Applebaum's Red Famine - powerful, relentless, shocking, compelling - will cement her deserved
reputation as the leading historian of Soviet crimes. (Daniel Finkelstein The Times)
Magisterial and heartbreaking (Simon Sebag Montefiore Evening Standard)
It remains a tragedy too little known. Applebaum's book, compelling in its detail and in its empathy with those who
suffered, will do much to remedy that ignorance and to place the current crises and confrontations in Ukraine into a
longer historical context (Nick Rennison The Sunday Times)
A vivid and informative account of the Ukrainian famine (Sheila Fitzpatrick Guardian)
Anne Applebaum has written an exhaustive, authoritative and eloquent book. She deals with questions that have hitherto
lacked unequivocal answers (Donald Rayfield Literary Review)
Red Famine, superbly researched and written, shows how blind adherence to ideology can bring murder most foul (Ian
Thomson )
Applebaum has painstakingly mined a vast array of sources, many of which were not available when the historian Robert
Conquest wrote his pioneering history (Adam Hochschild The New York Times)
What has come to light, and what Ms Applebaum synthesises in lucid and vigorous prose, is a devastating circumstantial
case. Red Famine presents a Bolshevik government so hell-bent on extracting wealth and controlling labour that it was
willing to confiscate the last remaining grain from hungry peasants (mostly but not exclusively in Ukraine) and then
block them from fleeing famine-afflicted areas to search for food (Economist)
Her account will surely become the standard of one of history's great political atrocities. ... Russians of
today can decide whether they wish to accept a Stalinist version of the past. But to have that choice, they need a sense
of the history. This is one more reason to be grateful for this remarkable book. (Timothy Snyder Washington Post)
From the Inside Flap
--------------------
In 1932-33, nearly four million Ukrainians died of starvation, having been deliberately deprived of food. It is one of
the most devastating episodes in the history of the twentieth century. With unprecedented authority and detail, Red
Famine investigates how this happened, who was responsible, and what the consequences were. It is the fullest account
yet published of these terrible events.
The book draws on a mass of archival material and first-hand testimony only available since the end of the Soviet Union,
as well as the work of Ukrainian scholars all over the world. It includes accounts of the famine by those who survived
it, describing what human beings can do when driven mad by hunger. It shows how the Soviet state ruthlessly used
propaganda to turn neighbours against each other in order to expunge supposedly 'anti-revolutionary' elements. It also
records the actions of extraordinary individuals who did all they could to relieve the suffering.
The famine was rapidly followed by an attack on Ukraine's cultural and political leadership - and then by a denial that
it had ever happened at all. Census reports were falsified and memory suppressed. Some western journalists shamelessly
swallowed the Soviet line; others bravely rejected it, and were undermined and harassed. The Soviet authorities were
determined not only that Ukraine should abandon its national aspirations, but that the country's true history should be
buried along with its millions of victims. Red Famine, a triumph of scholarship and human sympathy, is a milestone in
the recovery of those memories and that history. At a moment of crisis between Russia and Ukraine, it also shows how far
the present is shaped by the past.