• Lenin

  • The Man, the Dictator, and the Master of Terror
  • By: Victor Sebestyen
  • Narrated by: Jonathan Aris
  • Length: 20 hrs and 3 mins
  • 4.7 out of 5 stars (553 ratings)

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Lenin  By  cover art

Lenin

By: Victor Sebestyen
Narrated by: Jonathan Aris
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Publisher's summary

A fascinating biography of the man who helped launch the Russian Revolution, which uses the personal - including Lenin's key relationships with the women in his life - to shed light on the political<./b>

Since the birth of Soviet Russia, Vladimir Lenin has been viewed as a controversial figure, both revered and reviled for his rigid political ideals. Still, he continues to fascinate as a man who made history and who created the first Communist state, a model that would later be imitated by nearly half the countries in the world.

Drawing on new research, including the diaries, memoirs, and personal letters of both Lenin and his friends, Victor Sebestyen's unique biography - the first in English in nearly two decades - is not only a political examination of one of the most important historical figures of the 20th century but a portrait of Lenin the man. Unexpectedly, Lenin was someone who loved nature, hunting, and fishing and could identify hundreds of species of plants, a despotic ruler whose closest ties and friendships were with women. The long-suppressed story of the complex love triangle Lenin had with his wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya, and his mistress and comrade, Inessa Armand, reveals a different character from the coldly one-dimensional figure of the legend.

Sebestyen also reveals Lenin as a ruthless and single-minded despot and a "product of his time and place: a violent, tyrannical and corrupt Russia". He seized power in a coup, promised a revolution, a socialist utopia for the people, offered simple solutions to complex issues, and constantly lied; in fact what he created was more "a mirror image of the Romanov autocracy". He authorized the deaths of thousands of people and created a system based on the idea that political terror against opponents was justified for the greater ideal. One of his old comrades who had once admired him said he "desired the good...but created evil". And that would include his invention of Stalin, who would take Lenin's system of the gulag and the secret police to new heights.

Bringing Lenin to life for the first time as a complex human being, Sebestyen casts a new light on the Russian Revolution, one of the great turning points of modern history.

©2017 Victor Sebestyen (P)2017 Random House Audio

Critic reviews

"[An] excellent, original, and compelling portrait of Lenin as man and leader." (Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of The Romanovs)
"A vivid and rounded picture of Lenin the man. Serious and deeply reserved, the great revolutionary had few friends but loved at least two women deeply, and at the same time. Lenin's life has been told before, but Sebestyen brings to the task a gift for narrative and for describing his rich cast of characters." [Margaret MacMillan, The Oldie (UK)]

What listeners say about Lenin

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Excellent history and presentation

Well-documented work, brilliantly written and equally brilliantly presented. I understand the origins of 20th century conflicts much better now.

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Humanizes the Villain

I think this is what Audiobooks are meant for; that is for listening to autobiographies of historical figures. I know for me, I couldn’t picture myself going to a bookstore to pick up a book on Lenin. But an audiobook like this, that was so captivating through and through, made me feel like I was watching one of those well made, top production, Netflix documentaries. This was just all audio. I highly recommend this book if you were ever curious to learn of what started the communist revolution, or learning about how dictators can get to power (fyi it’s not so hard), or what life in Russia was like 100 years ago, or seeing the effect one human being can have on history, and many many more insights. I’m already looking up the next “great” figure I can read up on.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Great primer and introduction to the Soviet History

Victor Sebestyen paints a broad and fairly objective portrait of the man Lenin. He neither deifies him or slanders Lenin, put provides an accurate account of the man Lenin with his particular quirks, failings and strengths. The author squarely places Lenin within his time and life of a Russian revolutionary in the last declining years of the obsolete, absolute monarchy of the Romanov Dynasty and how he directly and inadvertently established a « communist » dictatorship of the « proletariat », which was a façade for the absolute monarchy it replaced.

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1 person found this helpful

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I wanted the book to continue...

As much as we could vainly wish Vladimir Ilitch had never become Lenin -- history can't but happen, whoever its actors are -- the end of the story had me wanting to hear more of it. 20 hours of listening... and I wanted 20 more. The story told by Viktor Sebestyen captures how the introvert child of a petit-bourgeois family in rural Russia finds himself at the crossroads of History with a sense of personal destiny. In the maelstrom of catastrophic political events that marked the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, what were the chances a would-be revolutionary zealot, financially supported by his mother, could become in the space of 25 years the head of the Bolchevik party and the founding father of the Soviet Union? Sebestyan weaves masterfully Lenin's personal life, his political convictions and struggles, his character, and the larger tapestry of the end-times of Tsarist Russia. His book leads its readers through Lenin's life and gives a fascinating account of his views through letters, diaries, Party documents, media articles (Pravda, Izvestia), as well as accounts and anecdotes told by those who fought with him or against him. It is a well-researched read, full of interesting details, always mindful of History with a capital H. It won't make you like Lenin (fortunately), but it reveals the man in his complexity and will give your mind something to chew on for a long time.

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Captivating and informative

Starting, I knew very little about Lenin, but by the end I somehow felt a guru on everything about the famous soviet.
The title led the painting of Lenin as dictator, but I am not convince the author tried to see his character from a neutral view point before the write-up. I think his sources and perception of Lenin going did not offer Lenin's past to draw it's own image and reasons.

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Outstanding!

Outstanding portrayal of Lenin as a human being as well as a power-hungry, ruthless utopian ideologue.

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Great overview of the Lenin and the Bolsheviks

This is a very well-written and informative book about the events that transpired in Lenin's lifetime, and a glimpse into his personal life and psychology.

The author is set up with the inherent problem of making the book about Lenin, while also explaining the complex historical events he was a part of. He mostly succeeds, but I was hoping for deeper analyses of Lenin's psyche and motivations.

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Lenin The Dictator, An Intimate Portrait

This outstanding book should be required reading for all students of the Czarist, Soviet, and post-Soviet eras as it describes the soul of the Russia people. Yes, I it also captures Lenin’s complex nature, his very personal, intimate life as well as his relationships with revolutionaries. I found to be an extremely fascinating and informative book, inspiring me to read other books by Victor Sebestyen and other expert Sovietologists on Bolshevism and its legacy.

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The best bio so far

Of the three Lenin biographies I’ve had the pleasure of reading of late (the other two by Ronald William Clark and Robert Payne), this is my favorite. Although all three contain an amazing number of matching quotes and have other distinctive similarities, I believe Sebestyen’s is the best balanced and most insightful. Possibly the passage of time and the opening of additional records and other source material benefited the author. I also preferred his simpler writing style. Substantively, the primary focus on Lenin just prior to the “pre-revolution” in 1905 through the October revolution in 1917, in addition the years leading up to his death, allowed fuller, more detailed explanations of how Lenin achieved dominance and gained ultimate power as the head of the Communist party. It’s still a wonder that Lenin managed to not only rise to prominence but to hang onto power when any number of times he might have either died via assassination, fell to anti-revolutionary military forces, or been shunted aside by the intrigues of competitors. While he was undoubtedly brilliant, he was also damn lucky time after time. In any event, this was an enjoyable read.

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Great book. Great reader.

A rare combination of great writing and great reader. You will leave understanding Lenin -- and therefore why Communism became synonymous with genocide and totalitarianism.

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3 people found this helpful