Beginning in 2009, Russian schools issued the book as required reading. Russian president
Vladimir Putin called the book "much-needed",
Arseny Roginsky, the then head of the human-rights organization
Memorial, welcomed Putin's backing for the Solzhenitsyn textbook. In her 1974 memoir, Reshetovskaya wrote that Solzhenitsyn did not consider the novel to be "historical research, or scientific research", and stated that the significance of the novel had been "overestimated and wrongly appraised." Reshetovskaya created an abridged version for Russian high-school students, Her books were published by the
Novosti Press, a state-run media founded by the
USSR Council of People's Commissars and the Communist Party Central Committee. Her editor there was Konstantin Semyonov, and he became her third husband.
Academic Historian and archival researcher
Stephen G. Wheatcroft described the book as "a fine literary masterpiece, a sharp political indictment against the Soviet regime, and has had tremendous importance in raising the issue of Soviet repression in the Russian consciousness." Wheatcroft wrote that the book was essentially a "literary and political work", and "never claimed to place the camps in a historical or social-scientific quantitative perspective" but that in the case of qualitative estimates, Solzhenitsyn gave his inaccurately high estimate as he wanted to challenge the Soviet authorities to show that "the scale of the camps was less than this." Wheatcroft stated that historians relied on Solzhenitsyn to support their estimates of deaths under Stalin in the tens of millions but research in the state archives vindicated the lower estimates, while adding that the popular press has continued to include serious errors that should not be cited, or relied on, in academia."
UCLA historian
J. Arch Getty wrote of Solzhenitsyn's methodology that "such documentation is methodologically unacceptable in other fields of history" and that "the work is of limited value to the serious student of the 1930s for it provides no important new information or original analytical framework. Gabor Rittersporn shared Getty's criticism, saying that "he is inclined to give priority to vague reminiscences and hearsay ... [and] inevitably [leads] towards selective bias", adding that "one might dwell at length on the inaccuracies discernible in Solzhenitsyn’s work".
Vadim Rogovin writes of the eyewitness accounts that Solzhenitsyn had read, saying he "took plenty of license in outlining their contents and interpreting them". Both Rogovin and
Walter Laquer argue that the book belongs to the genre of '
oral history'. In an interview with the German weekly newspaper
Die Zeit, British historian
Orlando Figes stated that many Gulag inmates he interviewed for his research identified so strongly with the book's contents that they became unable to distinguish between their own experiences and what they read: "
The Gulag Archipelago spoke for a whole nation and was the voice of all those who suffered." Soviet dissident and historian
Roy Medvedev referred to the book as "extremely contradictory". In a review for the book, Medvedev described it as without parallel for its impact, saying: "I believe there are few who will get up from their desks after reading this book the same as when they opened its first page. In this regard I have nothing with which to compare Solzhenitsyn's book either in Russian or world literature." In the same review, he also writes that "This book is full of thoughts and observations, some profound and true, others perhaps not always true but born in the monstrous sufferings of tens of millions of persons."
Popular press Novelist
Doris Lessing said that the book "brought down an empire", About its impact, philosopher
Isaiah Berlin wrote: "Until the Gulag, the Communists and their allies had persuaded their followers that denunciations of the regime were largely bourgeois propaganda." United States diplomat
George F. Kennan said that the book was "the most powerful single indictment of a political regime ever to be levied in modern times." Author
Tom Butler-Bowdon has described the book as a "Solzhenitsyn's monument to the millions tortured and murdered in Soviet Russia between the
Bolshevik Revolution and the 1950s." Psychologist
Jordan Peterson, who wrote the foreword of an abridged fiftieth anniversary edition released on 1 November 2018, described
The Gulag Archipelago as the most important book of the twentieth century. Parallels have been drawn between the book and the treatment of
Liao Yiwu, a dissident who is dubbed "the Chinese Solzhenitsyn" according to the
Agence France-Presse. Author
David Aikman stated that Liao is the first Chinese dissident writer to "come up with a very detailed account of prison conditions including torture in China in the same way that [Soviet dissident Aleksandr] Solzhenitsyn did in
The Gulag Archipelago." == Television documentary ==