Reviews
Description
This now forgotten autobiography by an obscure German revolutionary was one of the great (and unlikely) bestsellers of 1941, selling more than a million copies in the US alone. It is one of the most wrenching and remarkable autobiographies ever written, the tale of an ordinary guy deeply involved in world historical events in an era when the fate of Europe and the world hung in the balance. It is also the best cautionary tale of political fanaticism ever written. Jon Valtin (aka Richard Krebs) first participated in the failed German uprising (that was to save the Socialist Revolution from its isolation in backward Russia), then became an agent of the Communist International, spreading subversion all over the globe. Becoming increasingly dubious of Stalinism's pathological tendencies, he intentionally botched an assassination he had been commanded to carry out in Los Angeles. He spent three years in San Quentin, mastering English, then returned to Europe to fight fascism. He was captured by the Gestapo, escaped after more than three years, survived a murder attempt by Stalin's thugs, and finally washed up on the shores of the US, friendless and penniless at the height of the great depression. Besides being hard to put down, this book is both epic and tragic, but not in a ponderous or grim way; rather, it gives one a sharpened sense of what is at stake and what is possible in life.
EXTRA 10 % discount with code: EXTRA
The promotion ends in 23d.07:43:42
The discount code is valid when purchasing from 10 €. Discounts do not stack.
This now forgotten autobiography by an obscure German revolutionary was one of the great (and unlikely) bestsellers of 1941, selling more than a million copies in the US alone. It is one of the most wrenching and remarkable autobiographies ever written, the tale of an ordinary guy deeply involved in world historical events in an era when the fate of Europe and the world hung in the balance. It is also the best cautionary tale of political fanaticism ever written. Jon Valtin (aka Richard Krebs) first participated in the failed German uprising (that was to save the Socialist Revolution from its isolation in backward Russia), then became an agent of the Communist International, spreading subversion all over the globe. Becoming increasingly dubious of Stalinism's pathological tendencies, he intentionally botched an assassination he had been commanded to carry out in Los Angeles. He spent three years in San Quentin, mastering English, then returned to Europe to fight fascism. He was captured by the Gestapo, escaped after more than three years, survived a murder attempt by Stalin's thugs, and finally washed up on the shores of the US, friendless and penniless at the height of the great depression. Besides being hard to put down, this book is both epic and tragic, but not in a ponderous or grim way; rather, it gives one a sharpened sense of what is at stake and what is possible in life.
Reviews