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Lenin on the Train
Lenin on the Train
Sep 22, 2024 1:35 PM

Author:Catherine Merridale

Lenin on the Train

THE TIMES, THE FINANCIAL TIMES AND ECONOMIST BOOKS OF THE YEAR 2016

'Twice I missed my stop on the Tube reading this book... this is a jewel among histories' David Aaronovitch, The Times

'The suberb, funny, fascinating story of Lenin's trans-European rail journey to power and how it shook the world' - Simon Sebag Montefiore, Evening Standard Books of the Year

A gripping account of how, in the depths of the First World War, Russia's greatest revolutionary was taken in a 'sealed train' across Europe and changed the history of the world

By 1917 the European war seemed to be endless. Both sides in the fighting looked to new weapons, tactics and ideas to break a stalemate that was itself destroying Europe. In the German government a small group of men had a brilliant idea: why not sow further confusion in an increasingly chaotic Russia by arranging for Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, the most notorious of revolutionary extremists, currently safely bottled up in neutral Switzerland, to go home?

Catherine Merridale's Lenin on the Train recreates Lenin's extraordinary journey from harmless exile in Zurich, across a Germany falling to pieces from the war's deprivations, and northwards to the edge of Lapland to his eventual ecstatic reception by the revolutionary crowds at Petrograd's Finland Station.

With great skill and insight Merridale weaves the story of the train and its uniquely strange group of passengers with a gripping account of the now half-forgotten liberal Russian revolution and shows how these events intersected. She brilliantly uses a huge range of contemporary eyewitnesses, observing Lenin as he travelled back to a country he had not seen for many years. Many thought he was a mere 'useful idiot', others thought he would rapidly be imprisoned or killed, others that Lenin had in practice few followers and even less influence. They would all prove to be quite wrong.

Reviews

History books should give us insight and information, surprise and entertainment, and allow us to see the world, an incident or a character differently. Nicholas Shakespeare’s Six Minutes in May delivers in abundance.

—— Anthony Sattin , Observer, Best Books of 2017

Unputdownable… Us[es] new evidence with a novelist’s feeling for personality and atmosphere

—— John Gray , Guardian, Best Books of 2017

Of the abundant new books on the Second World War, Nicholas Shakespeare’s Six Minutes in May…takes the prize. The familiar story of how Churchill unexpectedly became prime minister in 1940 has never been told so amusingly, nor in such detail

—— Simon Heffer , Daily Telegraph, Best History Books of 2017

Nicholas Shakespeare’s Six Minutes in May: How Churchill Unexpectedly Became Prime Minister…is as gripping as a novel. Apart from being meticulously researched, thoroughly original and beautifully written, the book is an important reminder of the fact that the direction of history can change in a heartbeat

—— Peter Frankopan , History Today, Best History Books of 2017

An eloquent study in how quickly the political landscape can change -- and history with it

—— The Economist, Books of the Year 2017

A superbly written drama... Shakespeare's research is thorough and he has a novelist's flair for depicting the characters and motives of great and lesser men...Fascinating.

—— Book of the Week , The Times

Shakespeare brings both meticulous research and fictional artistry to illuminate the machinery of government under extreme stress and the abrasive conflict of large, self-confident personalities. It's a superb achievement.

—— Ian McEwan

Riveting…never less than gripping. But the real delight of its book is the convincing, and often revelatory, portraits of the main protagonists.

—— Evening Standard.

Brilliant, meticulous…This scintillating joy of a book — with a military narrative of British shame as well handled as William Dalrymple’s Return of a King, and a treatment of 20th-century British politics, romance, humiliation and desire as grandly realised as Anthony Powell’s great novel sequence….Shakespeare’s narrative is not just more reliable than Churchill’s, but more fun.

—— Spectator

Superb: far and away the best account of the moment which changed our national life and the world, and filled with extraordinary new details. Shakespeare brings a novelist's eye to the characters he writes about, but it is the extraordinary way he marshals his material, far more extensive than I've come across before, which makes this book quite simply magnificent.

—— John Simpson

Everyone delving into this riveting and rollicking account of the Chamberlain-Lord Halifax-Churchill succession will find special pleasure today in inhaling the rich mix of ambition and weakness, bravery and fecklessness, jealousy and sheer hatred, because the contemporary echoes are loud and irresistible... Nicholas Shakespeare achieves the remarkable feat of bringing tension to an old story by understanding the human drama...He has a novelist’s feel for self-pity, jealousy and ambition. The story of Churchill’s accession to power on the day that Hitler’s armies entered the Low Countries and set course for France has never been infused with so much humanity.

—— James Naughtie , New Statesman

The most thrilling book I have read for years.

—— Keith Thomas

Superb...Enthralling.

—— Daily Telegraph

Superb: he has pieced together the various sources (sometimes quite different in their accounts) and written what can almost be read as a detective story.

—— Norman Stone , The Oldie

Nicholas Shakespeare's impeccably researched, coherent and revelatory explanation about how Churchill became Prime Minister at the exact time of Hitler's onslaught in the West is totally captivating. It will stand as the best account of those extraordinary few days for very many years.

—— Andrew Roberts

Magnificent… The book, though totally anchored in the facts, has a novelist’s eye for feeling and atmosphere

—— i

Utterly wonderful… It reads like a thriller

—— Peter Frankopan

A superb work of history. Shakespeare has assumed nothing and allowed himself to be guided only by what a patient re-examination of the evidence-some of it new, much of it still surprisingly ill-digested until now- actually reveals. That is being an historian. The fact that he is also a novelist just means that it is very well written too, a thriller, in fact.

—— Simon Green, Professor of Modern History, Leeds University

Shakespeare is better known as a novelist than as a historian. This may change after his superb account of the under-examined Norwegian campaign, for which alone his book deserves to be read… Shakespeare is excellent in tracing the intricate manoeuvres ahead of the debate between groups of parliamentarians… Enthralling

—— David Lough , Daily Telegraph

One of the very best history books I have ever read.

—— Duff and Nonsense

An eloquent study in how quickly the political landscape can change—and history with it.

—— The Economist

An absorbing account of how events 1,300 miles away across the North Sea let to the most drastic cabinet reshuffle in modern British history... Shakespeare's book grips the attention from beginning to end. He conjures the characters and personalities of the senior commanders in the Norwegian campaign with a novelist's flair and eye for detail.

—— Ian Thomson , Observer

The most prescient book of the year

—— Ricky Ross , Big Issue

Sometimes, I think of it as a song cycle; sometimes, a book of poems; sometimes, an epic. Vuong puts himself at the centre of this collection in an astonishing way, even as he is also entirely willing to set himself aside.

—— Alexander Chee , Frieze

Ocean Vuong’s Night Sky With Exit Wounds... is beguiling and sublime.

—— Diana Evans , Guardian

Vuong's voice is unique and inspires empathy.

—— Eva Waite-Taylor , Independent

Beautiful... [Night Sky With Exit Wounds] is pretty special.

—— Francesca Hayward , Observer

I loved Dadland for its tenderness, humour and candour. It has begun to open the door for me to what may well lie ahead in my life, in so many of our lives, in terms of ageing parents. And it has also taught me something deeply moving about tolerance, and about love

—— Robert Macfarlane

A wonderful, haunting and beautifully written memoir... I found myself laughing out loud at times and, at others, unable to hold back the tears... An absolutely stunning book

—— James Holland

Dadland has the weight of family love but fizzes along in accessible and dynamic prose, highly recommended

—— Andrew McMillan

A mesmerising performance by a natural storyteller gifted with the most seductive material possible, in the wild and wonderful life of her exasperating Irish father. Pain and annoyance is transmuted into pure narrative gold, as Keggie Carew interrogates the legend of this wartime adventurer and the bitter comedy of his domestic relationships and his late decline. A brave, risk-taking tale that alarms, delights and moves. As soon as you come to the end, you want to start again, to see if those things really happened

—— Iain Sinclair

You love these people from the first page ... As Tom's life falls apart memory by memory, Keggie is picking it up again and her storytelling is spell-binding. Effortlessly readable, this is a delight combining laughter - and tears, yes, quite a few of those.

—— Connexion

Compelling

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express

A moving memoir-cum-biography.

—— Molly McCloskey , Irish Times

By some margin my Book of the Month... A detective story, a family history, a thrilling tale of derring-do, and the most distinctive and affecting memoir I’ve read since H is for Hawk.

—— Bookseller

Utterly remarkable, and beautifully evoked… Dadland is a completely riveting, deeply poignant “manhunt” for which I predict great things.

—— Bookseller

Dadland, by Keggie Carew, is being tipped for award-winning breakout success in the vein of H is for Hawk

—— Jon Coates , Sunday Express

It’s an exorcism, ghost-hunt and swim through the archipelago of her father’s shattered self… The author’s descriptions have an easy lyricism.

—— Ed Cripps , Times Literary Supplement

The old question 'what did you do in the war, Dad?' has never had a more surprising or moving answer.

—— David Hepworth

Warm and funny, sometimes regretful and sad, but overall a read like a rollercoaster. Wonderful.

—— Western Morning News

You know the saying that everyone has a book in them? Well, unless your book is as good as this, I'd give up right now

—— Daily Mail , Markus Berkmann

You know the saying that everyone has a book in them? Well, unless your book is as good as this, I’d give up right now… This gripping book, written with real verve and a narrative expertise that wouldn’t shame a veteran.

—— Sally Morris , Daily Mail

A brilliant, bittersweet biography.

—— Cornelia Parker , Observer

Keggie’s writing is immersive… She writes with a warmth and generosity about her father, a man who was a genuine character and hero.

—— Paul Cheney , Nudge

Dadland is deeply personal. But it is also the story of our generations: people touched by war and by Alzheimer’s

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express
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