Become a Member
Books

Review: 'Stalingrad' and 'Vasily Grossman and the Soviet Century'

The brilliant and the barbaric: Mark Glanville reviews Vasily Grossman

August 23, 2019 16:13
Vasily Grossman
2 min read

Stalingrad by Vasily Grossman (Trans: Robert Chandler, Harvill Secker, £25) and Vasily Grossman and the Soviet Century by Alexandra Popoff (Yale University Press, £25)

"It is impossible to make any parallels between the fate of this novel [Life and Fate] and that of the book, For a Just Cause. I read For a Just Cause and found nothing politically offensive in it."

So wrote Mikhail Suslov, a high party functionary, in response to Vasily Grossman, after Grossman, the Ukrainian Jewish writer of both For a Just Cause and its powerful, hard-hitting sequel of the 1950s, Life and Fate, had written in 1962 to Nikita Kruschev, imploring him to release the latter, his masterpiece, which had, bizarrely, been “arrested” a year earlier. 

It was not to be published during the author’s lifetime. This, we learn from Alexandra Popoff’s highly readable, well-researched account of the writer and his times.