Conspirator: Lenin in Exile
revealing the complex personality of the man behind the bolshevik seizure of power in 1917 and what got him there
“Helen Rappaport presents an exhaustive, almost week-by-week account of this period when the great Bolshevik (at times, almost the only Bolshevik) and his wife Nadya hopped from one European city to another, dodging secret policemen, living from hand to mouth and tirelessly writing, debating, organising, plotting, plotting, plotting . . .”
Roger Hutchinson Scotsman
Conspirator: Lenin in Exile
About writing Conspirator
Helen talks about Conspirator in an interview with Blackwell Books.
Reviews
“Vivid … Lenin’s ruthless determination to seize power in October 1917 probably owed much to his awareness that he had but one chance to escape the world of paranoia and conspiracy in which he had operated for so long, and that Rappaport evokes so successfully.”
Nick Rennison Sunday Times
“Pretty much essential reading for anyone interested in Russian history”
Scott Pack
“In Helen Rappaport’s vivid account, we finally have a worthy counterpart to Simon Sebag Montefiore’s Young Stalin“
George Eaton New Statesman
“A magnificent book… Rappaport’s account of his earlier, often neglected decades is well researched, fluently written and something of a triumph”
The tablet
You may also like:
Latest Articles and Media about Lenin & the Russian Revolution
Lenin in London
Most people know the now legendary tale of how Lenin returned to Russia after many years in exile on a sealed train across wartime Germany, arriving at Petrograd’s Finland Station on 16 April 1917. But few are aware of the life he led in Europe between 1900 and his dramatic return. During those years he came to London on five separate occasions…
John Reed: Writing the Russian Revolution
John Reed was the archetypal rebellious romantic. He was made for revolution and hungry for a cause and the Russian Revolution found its most passionate American advocate in him
Mariya Bochkareva and the Petrograd Women’s Death Battalion
“Since our men are hesitating to fight, the women must show them how to die for their country and for liberty…” In May, in Petrograd, Mariya Bochkareva held a mass recruitment rally for the Women’s Death Battalion.
The Women in Lenin’s Life
Lenin had no qualms whatsoever in ruthlessly exploiting the loyalty of the women who formed his essential back up team. He wore them all ragged in the cause of his own political ends.