An impassioned firsthand account of the Russian Revolution An American journalist and revolutionary writer, John Reed became a close friend of Lenin and was an eyewitness to the 1917 revolution in Russia. Ten Days That Shook the World is Reed's extraordinary record of that event. Writing in the firs
Ten Days That Shook The World
β Scribed by John Reed
- Publisher
- Progress Publishers
- Year
- 1922
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 347
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
John Reed (1887-1920)βwriter and publicist, one of the founding members of the Communist Party of the USA. This book was first published in the United States in 1919 and in 1923 it came out in Russian in the USSR, where it was reprinted many times.
All its printings in Russian, including the first edition, were prefaced by V.I. Lenin and Nadezhda Krupskaya.
John Reed regarded Lenin as an extraordinary leader βwith the power of explaining profound ideas in simple terms, of analysing a concrete situation. And combined with shrewdness, the greatest intellectual audacity.β
John Reedβs book was the first in world literature that conveyed to the world the truth about the victorious socialist revolution in Russia that set in a new era in the history of humankind.
β¦ Table of Contents
Introduction by V. I. Lenin.......................................................... 5
Introduction to the Russian Edition by N. K. Krupskaya ... 6
Preface................................................................................................. 11
Notes and Explanations.................................................................. 16
Chapter I. Background.................................................................. 27
Chapter II. The Coming Storm................................................. 39
Chapter III. On the Eve.............................................................. 58
Chapter IV. The Fall of the Provisional Government......... 81
Chapter V. Plunging Ahead......................................................... 107
Chapter VI. The Committee for Salvation.............................. 132
Chapter VII. The Revolutionary Front.................................... 150
Chapter VIII. Counter-Revolution.............................................. 165
Chapter IX. Victory........................................................................ 182
Chapter X. Moscow........................................................................ 201
Chapter XI. The Conquest of Power....................................... 212
Chapter XII. The Peasantsβ Congress....................................... 233
Appendixes........................................................................................ 248
The Biography of John Reed. By Albert Phys Williams .... 332
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
"This is a new edition, annotated and with an introduction, of American journalist John Reed's classic eyewitness account of the Russian Revolution of 1917."--Provided by publisher.
John Reed conveys, with the immediacy of cinema, the impression of a whole nation in ferment and disintegration. A contemporary journalist writing in the first flush of revolutionary enthusiasm, he gives us a record of the events in Petrograd in November 1917, when Lenin and the Bolsheviks finally s