3. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - The Gulag Archipelago (Abridged)
We read about Hitler, now let’s talk about his Soviet twin Stalin. The Gulag Archipelago, unlike the last book which is well-researched but done by a classic historian, this book is written by a survivor of the gulag and cobbled from first-person accounts of others also in the gulag. He actually had to hide his manuscripts and one of the original copies was actually taken by the KGB, but by hiding it in the house of an Estonian friend who had also been in the gulag previously, he was able to release the book in France (although he wanted it to be published in Russian). He was exiled from Russia for the crime of telling the truth. The Abridged version is about 1/2 or so of the original length? Not sure.
Despite my introduction to this review, this book goes through pains to outline Lenin’s role in gulag culture. While the post-WWII gulag’s enormity was definitely Stalin’s creation, Lenin was the person who originally implemented them in Russia, mostly as a place to hold political enemies and other inconvenient people. Actually, the idea of the labor camp was articulated by Marx in his work as well. The gulag can be traced back to the beginning of communism. However, it was popular in post-Stalin Russia to say that all of the horrible things that happened were just Stalin’s fault, when the truth was that many involved were complicit.
The author was put in a gulag in 1945. He was taken off the front line of the war for writing anti-government things in his letters to a friend who was also fighting in the war. The gulag was full of different types of folks; people who didn’t like communism, people who were Volga Germans, Estonians, Latvians, etc etc, as well as sometimes people who arbitrarily pissed off the gulag people. There was a law that was so broad in its scope that you could be arrested for almost anything called Article 58. In some ways, the most horrifying thing was that they sent many many POWs from WWII to gulags, because they feared their ‘westernization’. It is very interesting that Soviet Russia was so afraid of the introduction of alternate ideas to their country. And often, people were just thrown in to meet quotas. They would also extend the stay in the gulag for no real reason.
In some ways the book feels very… caught in the minutiae of life in the gulag, but the point was of course to expose the horror that was the gulag, following the story from the 42! torture methods of the gulag to the prison to the journey to labor camp to the labor camp. Which is simultaneously kind of tedious but also accents the arduousness of the journey. His commentary on the lack of efficacy of the hunger strike was one of the randomly interesting parts of the book. Previously, in tsarist Russia, people went on hunger strikes to emphasize the horrors of prison (which the author thinks was quite hilariously wussy compared to the gulag). In the gulag, however, no one knows where you are or gives a shit because the government hides all of the facilities, so the hunger strike is completely pointless.
The other part of the book that is quite fascinating is the commentary on life outside of the gulag, where people spent most of their time in constant fear of surveillance and constant vigilance against their neighbors. It created a culture where no one truly trusted one another, not even their family members and their spouses.
The author pretty much skewers everyone involved, but points out that, again, Russia is not a unique place where bad things happen, but that the culture built to devalue human life could happen anywhere.
No one seems to be certain, but the estimates are that up to 60 million people were imprisoned in the gulag during the system’s time.
4. Brandon Sanderson - Edgedancer
A light, fun romp, in contrast to the previous book. The main character is a crazy thief girl and she has a magical companion named Wyndle. The story sets up some nice character work for a couple of characters in Stormlight Archive, as well as just exposing what is going on outside of the main country where most of the action happens in the main series. Interesting little book, nothing too deep but I finished it pretty quickly.