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Stalin's Apologist

Walter Duranty: The New York Times's Man in Moscow

«A beautifully researched life of the high-living, cynical journalist who helped cover up Stalin's atrocities in the 1930s.»

New York Times Book Review

Short, unattractive, hobbling about Stalin's Moscow on a wooden leg, Walter Duranty was an unlikely candidate for the world's most famous foreign correspondent. Yet for almost twenty years his articles filled the front page of The New York Times with gripping coverage of the aftermath of the Russian Revolution. Les mer

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Short, unattractive, hobbling about Stalin's Moscow on a wooden leg, Walter Duranty was an unlikely candidate for the world's most famous foreign correspondent. Yet for almost twenty years his articles filled the front page of The New York Times with gripping coverage of the aftermath of the Russian Revolution. A witty, engaging, impish character with a flamboyant life-style, he was a Pulitzer Prize winner, the individual most credited with helping to win
the U.S. recognition for the Soviet regime, and the reporter who had predicted the success of the Bolshevik state when all others claimed it was doomed. But, as S.J. Taylor reveals in this provocative biography, Walter Duranty played a key role in perpetrating some of the greatest lies history has ever known.

Stalin's Apologist deftly unfolds the story of this accomplished but sordid and tragic life. Drawing on sources ranging from newspapers to private letters and journals to interviews with such figures as William Shirer and W. Averell Harriman, Taylor's vivid narrative unveils a figure driven by ambition, whose early success reporting on Bolshevik Russia-he was foremost in predicting Stalin's rise to power-established his international reputation, fed his overconfident contempt for his
colleagues, and indeed led him to identify with the Soviet dictator. Thus during the great Ukrainian famine of the early 1930s, which Stalin engineered to crush millions of peasants who resisted his policies, Duranty dismissed other correspondents' reports of mass starvation and, though secretly aware of the
full scale of the horror, effectively reinforced the official cover-up of one of history's greatest man-made disasters. Later, he took the rigged show trials of Stalin's Great Purges at face value, blithely accepting the guilt of the victims. He believed himself the leading expert on the Soviet Union, and his faith in his own insight drew him into a downward spiral of distortions and untruths, typified by his memorable excuse for Stalin's crimes, "You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs."

Taylor brilliantly captures the full range of Duranty's astonishing life, from his participation in the Satanic orgies of Aleister ("the Beast") Crowley, to his dramatic front-line reporting during World War I, to his epic womanizing and heavy drug and alcohol abuse. It is the bitter, ironic story of a man who had the rare opportunity to bring to light the suffering of the millions of Stalin's victims, but remained a prisoner of vanity, self-indulgence, and success.

Detaljer

Forlag
Oxford University Press Inc
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780197536520
Utgivelsesår
2020
Format
24 x 16 cm

Anmeldelser

«A beautifully researched life of the high-living, cynical journalist who helped cover up Stalin's atrocities in the 1930s.»

New York Times Book Review

«A whopping piece of reporting....Here is all the excitement of suspense fiction (and so much of Duranty's life was fiction) and first-class old-fashioned reporting based on digging and attention to facts and clues. A great read about a reporter who did more to fix early American attitudes toward Stalin's Russia than any other individual.»

Harrison Salisbury

«A fascinating insight into [Duranty's] life and work, his rise to fame, and his fall to obscurity. Extremely well researched and written, Stalin's Apologist is a special view of journalistic history.»

Pierre Salinger, Senior Editor Europe, ABC News

«This is a story left untold far too long. It should be read by every journalist.»

Patrick Sloyan, Senior Correspondent, New York Newsday

«A fascinating story which proves again that the successful journalist is often the man who tells people what they want to believe rather than the truth."-Richard Ingrams, Former Editor, Private Eye»

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