Simon Sebag Montefiore

Stalin

CA$330

Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar is Simon Sebag Montefiore’s chilling, superbly researched study of the Soviet dictator and his circle, in a Folio edition with stunning archive photography.

Stalin

CA$330
Book Details
 
Presentation Box & BindingBound in printed cloth
Printed slipcase
Ribbon markers
Dimensions9½ inches x 6¼ inches
FontSet in Sirba with PAG Revolucion as display
Pages920 pages
AuthorSimon Sebag Montefiore
Illustration32 pages of black & white integrated photographs, 52 pages of colour and black & white plates
2 maps, 1 family tree
Publication Date09/05/2023
Editor's Notes
 
Written by the best-selling and prize-winning historian Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar is a thrilling, intimate portrait of a dictator who ‘believed the solution to every human problem was death’, and the henchmen who presided over an era of mass murder in his name. Drawing on ground-breaking original research, Sebag Montefiore lays out in terrifying detail the intrigue, debauchery, paranoia and treachery inside the cloistered world of the Soviet Union’s ruling circle. With its fresh perspective on the way Stalin and his associates exercised power, both within and outside the Kremlin, this has become the definitive biography. The selection of photography is unique to this handsome two-volume Folio edition, portraying the figures within Stalin’s court and the enormity of war and oppression in the territories he ruled. It includes pictures from the David King Archive, one of the world’s leading collections of Soviet photography – some published for the first time. At a time when statues are once again being raised to Stalin in Russia, The Court of the Red Tsar is a chilling and timely read.

About the Author

Simon Sebag Montefiore is a leading historian, best known for his historical writing about Russia and the Middle East, including Jersualem: The Biography (which won Book of the Year from the Jewish Book Council), Catherine the Great and Potemkin (which was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize), The Romanovs and Young Stalin. His books have been published in 48 languages. Most recently he is the author of The World: A Family History, an epic work of narrative history. He has presented BBC documentary series on Vienna, Jerusalem and Istanbul, among others, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.