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Review: The Road

Slaughter’s reporter

October 14, 2010 10:34
Vasily Grossman: witness to brutal excess who conveyed his experience in vivid journalism and poignant fiction

ByMark Glanville, Mark Glanville

2 min read

By Vasily Grossman (Trans: Robert and Elizabeth Chandler)
Maclehose Press, £20

'Why am I writing? Which truth am I confirming? Which truth do I wish to triumph?" So wrote Maxim Gorky in his report on Grossman's first novel, Glyukauf.

Grossman witnessed the siege of Stalingrad and the immediate aftermath of the extermination camp at Treblinka as a journalist travelling with the Red Army. His mother was murdered by the Nazis at Berdichev, as were many friends and colleagues during Stalin's reign of terror. He must often have pondered how best to convey the excesses of the brutal times he witnessed and endured.

This superbly edited compendium of his writing, containing short stories, journalism and letters to his dead mother, allows us to assess the nature and success of his enterprise. Through its lucid notes and essays it also serves as a first-class companion to the terrible history of mid-20th-century central Europe.