Book description
But for Swallows and Amazons, some of Arthur Ransome's earlier
writings would be better known. The extraordinary success Ransome
achieved as a children's writer, from the 1930's until his death in
1967, perhaps inevitably eclipsed his earlier work, but in the case of
his two books and pamphlet on the Russian revolutions of 1917 and the
tumultuous events that followed that is a great loss: it can be said
unequivocally that these writings are on a par, perhaps even
exceeding, such classics as John Reed's Ten Days that Shook the World.
Arthur Ransome knew Russia. He lived there from 1914 to 1918 almost
all the time. He taught himself Russian and became a foreign
correspondent for the liberal Daily News and Manchester Guardian. More
than that, he came to know many of the Bolshevik leaders like Lenin,
Trotsky and Checherin almost as personal friends, and, indeed, married
Trotsky's secretary, Evgenia Petrovna Shelepina. Arthur Ransome as a
commentator on the Russian scene at the most convulsive moment in its
history is unique. Unlike famous visitors like H. G. Wells (though his
marvellous book, Russia in the Shadows shouldn't be overlooked) and
Bertrand Russell, his was no brief journalistic inspection: and unlike
other reporters such as John Reed, Victor Serge and Alfred Rosmer
there was no tendentiousness in what he wrote - they were convinced
revolutionaries, Ransome, although not unsympathetic to the Bolshevik
cause, was a more objective recorder. Six Weeks in Russia, The Crisis
in Russia and the pamphlet, The Truth about Russia constitute the best
contemporary writing about Russia at the time of the Bolshevik
takeover. They were reissued in the early 1990s, with an introduction
by Paul Foot which has been retained for the Faber Finds reissue of
Six Weeks in Russia; otherwise they have been out of print since first published