Critical Acclaim for Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar in
hardback
'One of the two outstanding books of the year, Stalin
by Simon Sebag Montefiore... was the most civilised and elegant chronicle of
brutality and ruthlessness I have ever read, its prose cool and clear but never
indifferent' Ruth Rendell, Daily Telegraph
'Montefiore's Stalin... horrific, revelatory and
sobering... triumph of research and should be required reading in Russia.
Book of the Year' John Le Carré, Observer
'I did not think I could learn anything new about Stalin but I was wrong.
A stunning performance' Dr Henry Kissinger
'Stalin: the Court of the Red Tsar is one of the best
biographies I have ever read in my life' Shimon Peres
'The book I have enjoyed most over the past year was Stalin: The Court of
the Red Tsar. It was eye-opening. How he managed to kill
probably 30 or 40 million people and conceal it is unbelievable' Alex
Ferguson
'This grim masterpiece, shot through with lashes of black humour... The
personal details are riveting' Antonia Fraser, Mail on Sunday
'This fascinating book... [Montefiore] concentrates, as any good historian
should, on pushing forward the boundaries of our knowledge of the subject...
[He] provides rich detail of daily life and family relationships in a world of
human values turned inside out... scrupulously fair in the way he describes
Stalin's qualities – including his ability to charm, his uncanny grasp of
geopolitical issues, his brilliant handling of foreign statesmen and his
genuine passion for literature' Antony Beevor, Sunday Times
'His masterful and terrifying account of Stalin... seldom has the picture been
put in finer focus than by Sebag Montefiore. It is partly through his diligent
interviews with the children of survivors and his admirable combination of
history and gossip that one sees the awful banality, the brutal crudity of the
men who carelessly sent so many millions to their senseless deaths' Alistair
Horne, The Times
'This magnificent portrait... Simon Sebag Montefiore has mined the rich veins
of recent Russian writing on the Stalin age and of newly opened archives to
give us an intimate history... The stifling, contiguous life of the Soviet
elite in and around the Kremlin is wonderfully conveyed, in some of the most
striking and literary passages in the book... Striking the balance between
political narrative and personal biography is a difficult one... Montefiore
keeps both in perspective... a wonderfully rich and vibrant portrait of the
Stalinist elite who lived in the shadow of a remarkable and dangerous colossus'
Richard Overy, Literary Review
'Everyone in Westminster has been reading [Stalin]
during these turbulent leadership times. I've met Labour ministers and Tory
backbenchers reeling from stories... reading this book for tips on how to
become an efficient fighting machine... Everyone is mugging up on Stalin' Alice
Thomson, Daily Telegraph
'Read it or face social Siberia... a cross-over success. Academically and
intellectually rigorous, it's also a riveting read... it takes a great writer
to make it seem fresh. And Sebag Montefiore certainly does that... Sebag
Montefiore's greatest achievement has been to "humanise" Stalin. Uncle Joe was
a mass murderer and a paranoid sociopath. But he was also charming, friendly
and flirtatious' 100 Best Things in the World Right Now, GQ magazine
'Grimly brilliant' Andrew Marr, Daily Telegraph
'Excellent... This book is like a vast Russian novel full of characters,
colour, terror, passion and treachery... love affairs, marriages, divorces,
imprisonments and killings' Susannah Tarbush, Al-Hayat
'Montefiore's masterful study of Stalin and his entourage provides the best
personal portrait to date of the man and his group' Daniel Beer, Jewish
Chronicle
'Montefiore has managed to get inside the mind of the 20th century's worst mass
murderer. What he has found thre will affect your view of human nature... a
thoughtful book of first-class scholarship as well as a transfixing
narrative... all... vividly recreated by Montefiore's caustically witty prose'
Andrew Roberts, Daily Telegraph
'Its extraordinary revelation of the evil – the complete amorality – at the
heart of the dictator's court will change the way historians approach the great
historical questions about the Stalinist regime' Orlando Figes, Sunday
Telegraph
'An astonishingly good and important book... he provides a remarkably fresh and
exciting account of one of history's darkest periods' Simon Heffer, Country
Life
'This is no ordinary scholarly life, it's ultra reader-friendly, lively,
gossipy, and packed with revelations about the intimacies and intrigues of
Stalin the man and his courtiers. Brilliant' Evening Standard, Metro Life
magazine
'For anyone with the slightest interest in 20th-century history, this is
essential, utterly compelling, page-turning reading. The book is a masterpiece
of horror' Robert Harvey, The Tablet
'Sebag Montefiore paints a detailed and fascinating picture of the complex
interactions and intrigues that characterized Kremlin life under Stalin... [he]
has done a valuable service in drawing our attention to a hitherto
little-studied aspect of Stalinism. As his Stalin demonstrates,
the personal relationships of those who ran the Kremlin provided an essential
dynamic for the development of the Stalinist system' Amy Knight, TLS
'This fascinating account of the dictator's reign... Montefiore provides a
riveting portrait of the man and his ruling circle... this book gives us an
unprecedented glimpse into his intimate life, the inner workings of his
government and the relations between the members of his junta, many of whom
have remained shadowy figures until now... The result is a much finer and
nuanced understanding of the Bolshevik phenomenon than we have had before.
Using his sources with great skill, Montefiore has succeeded in placing Stalin
and the Bolsheviks in the context of their time' Marc Lambert, Scotsman
'This magisterial new biography of Stalin... Sebag Montefiore makes some
interesting new assertions about Stalin's psychology... well-written; he
evidently has a superb grasp of Russian, and can operate well in that
still-difficult country' Lesley Chamberlain, Independent
'Montefiore drives his story forward with breathless enthusiasm... in a work of
great importance. Scholars will read it for the valuable new evidence it
assembles. Others will enjoy it as a fascinating page-turner and an everyday
saga of extraordinary Kremlin folk' Rodric Braithwaite, Financial Times
'Gripping and timely... [Montefiore]... had the bright idea of examining the
letters, telegrams and diaries of [Stalin's] intimate associates. As a result,
this is a book based on extraordinary primary research... one of the few recent
books on Stalinism that will be read in years to come. The devil is in the
detail' Robert Service, Guardian
'His spectacular new work... This is an impressive and compelling work' Philip
Mansel, Spectator
'An extraordinary book... he has managed to persuade a whole generation of
little old ladies and elderly men – the wives, granddaughters, servants, nieces
and nephews of Stalin's henchmen – to give him a series of extraordinary
interviews and, in some cases, lend him their hand-written memoirs... For
anyone fascinated by the nature of evil – and by the effects of absolute power
on human relationships – this book will provide new insights on every page'
Anne Applebaum, Evening Standard
'Montefiore has travelled extensively throughout the former USSR, interviewing
survivors of this extraordinary era and several descendants of those closest to
the Boss and gaining access to unpublished documents and photographs... The
result is a dizzying kaleidoscope of new and well-known materials, all of which
combine to give fresh insights into the bizarre world of Stalin's rule' Patrick
O'Meara, Irish Independent
'Utilising an immense amount of original research... offering a composite
picture of the Stalin years in breathtaking detail... Montefiore... reveals a
man who was, in so many ways, frighteningly human... Montefiore has succeeded
brilliantly in showing that Stalin and his courtiers were human beings who
laughed, loved and cried while they murdered, tortured and raped' Gerard
DeGroot, Scotland on Sunday
'A more intimate, less conventional history of... Stalin... a truly fascinating
body of research. The result is a vivid picture of life in this murderous
court' Charlotte Hobson, Daily Telegraph
'A graphic and highly readable account... Montefiore has marshalled existing
material, uncovered long-buried testimonies, even managed to interview three
generations of Kremlin survivors... Sex and the Kremlin are not usually
mentioned in the same sentence and Montefiore's revelations are quite
arresting' Harold Shukman, Times Higher Educational Supplement
'Montefiore's master work charts in compelling detail the story of Georgia's
two most infamous sons, the all-powerful dictator and Beria' Andrew Cook, The
Times
'No summary can do justice to the wealth of this book, which leaves little to
be desired... Nevertheless, this work should be read by anyone interested in
Stalin's life and times, or in the workings of a highly developed tyranny' Clive
Foss, History Today
'Marvellous' Allan Massie, Sunday Times
Book Of The Year Selections 2003
'Montefiore's Stalin, I should imagine, will be the
standard work on this twentieth-century monster for years to come' Jeremy
Paxman, Sunday Telegraph
'Enormously readable and even grimly amusing... the details of the cruelty and
depravity... are incredible' Miriam Gross, Sunday Telegraph
'Paced with details about a man who was brilliant, often charming, sometimes
kind, but also terrorised his own people... The story of a monster' Charles
Guthrie, Sunday Telegraph
'Montefiore's Stalin showed us the century's worst
dictator wasn't merely a paranoid narcissist but also anxious, uncertain, even
charming... Now we can see him as a human being too' John Simpson, Daily
Telegraph
'Outstanding... Unforgettable' Antony Beevor, Daily Telegraph
'Montefiore's Stalin... full of wonderful detail, a
more convincing portrait of the charm of wickedness than Gitta Sereny's sober
studies' Sarah Sands
'Simon Sebag Montefiore had one of the literary triumphs of the year in Stalin:
Court of the Red Tsar' David Robson, Sunday Telegraph
'Montefiore's Stalin uses newly available archival
materials to paint a picture – simultaneously fascinating and repulsive – of
the homelife of [these] jolly psychopaths. Book of the Year' T. J. Binyon, Evening
Standard
'The most revealing account of the inner circles of tyranny since Albert
Speer's inside story of Hitler's bunker. Book of the Year' Norman Lebrecht,
Evening Standard
'Enlivened by sharp pen portraits and grisly anecdotes, Montefiore's study...
was admired for its elegant prose as well as its grotesque cavalcade of
monsters' Books of the Year, The Week
'Montefiore's Stalin captivated me' Rod Liddle,
Cultural Highlights of the Year, The Times
'Brings alive that many-sided monster... the first book that has given me
grounds for thinking it might be possible to understand how Stalin got away
with his enormities. Book of the Year' David Pryce-Jones, Spectator
'The most insightful account of the regime I have yet read. Book of the Year'
Oliver Letwin, Guardian
'Superb... Obligatory reading!' Ronald Harwood, 'My 6 Best Books', The Week
'Illuminates the complexities of Stalinism. Book of the Year' Neil Tennant,
The Times