Writing about what makes
Stalin: Breaker of Nations unique among the vast number of Stalin biographies,
J. Arch Getty writes, Yet, despite the unending stream of Stalin biographies, Stalin: Breaker of Nations fills an important niche. Until now, we have not had a serious, readable treatment aimed at a popular audience. Previous attempts to produce such for a non-specialist audience have foundered either because they were ponderously long and tedious, or because omission of a scholarly apparatus led to semi-fictional stories based more on imagination than fact. Robert Conquest has managed to avoid these pitfalls and has produced a highly readable, manageable book, accessible both to non-Russianist scholars and the general public. Getty commented further that Conquest's biography "displays a kind of interpretive distinction from some of the author's earlier works. Although Conquest has by no means gone soft on communism, the book is short on the repeated manichean characterizations of communism-as-evil that his earlier books used almost as an explanatory vehicle." He also praises Conquest's writing style as deft and polished. He criticises Conquest's presentation as facts claims that there is still significant academic disagreement, such as labelling the 1932 famine as an intentional genocide and the death of
Sergei Kirov as planned murder, Conquest's use of memoirs, stating that Conquest's description of
Boris Bazhanov's memoirs as "very useful but not always authentic", "makes one wonder whether we can pick and choose the memories we like (or the rumors most often repeated) and discard the inconvenient ones." and points out that in
Alexander Orlov's memoirs, he reported the existence of an imminent military coup on Stalin in 1937, which like in Bazhanov's claim that Stalin murdered Kirov, were both heard second-hand, and labels Conquest's choice of language in certain areas as "incautious", like the suggestion that "Stalin's antipathy toward Poles may have resulted "from their failure to let him defeat them at Lwow in 1920." or calling the pro-FDR American politicians as having displayed "selective sanctimoniousness... even more repulsive than their political stupidity." But ultimately, Getty states that "Even with its flaws, this book is the best short popular biography of Stalin."
Robert Legvold writes in
Foreign Policy, A graceful, evocative and compact biography, written by a long-time student of this man and his heroic, sad, too often awful times. Neither in explaining Stalin nor in probing the "ism" to which he gave rise does the book break fundamentally new ground. But it does incorporate new material from recent years into what is the most readable and accessible portrait available of a figure who still haunts his tortured land.
Academic journals • D'Agostino, A. (1995). Stalin Old and New.
The Russian Review,
54(3), 447–451. • Getty, J. (1993). Review: Stalin: Breaker of Nations
Slavic Review,
52(4), 914–915. • Legvold, R. (1992). Reviewed Work: Stalin: Breaker of Nations by Robert Conquest
Foreign Affairs,
71(2), 205-205.
Popular media • • • • ==See also==