Stalin.NOBODY before Stalin had ever killed so many of his own people. Never apologize, never explain, was Stalin's own guiding rule, and his career will probably always remain too sinister to be entirely grasped. He allowed no glimpse of the man beneath the monster. Legends inevitably accrued. Some of these are open to examination, and Mr. Radzinsky, a popular Russian journalist and writer, does as much as can be done through archives and interviews of surviving witnesses. Confusions about Stalin's actual date of birth, his possible illegitimate ILLEGITIMATE. That which is contrary to law; it is usually applied to children born out of lawful wedlock. A bastard is sometimes called an illegitimate child. brother, his wife's suicide, and much else of the sort have been resolved. All his life he wrote to his mother in his native Georgian; this was as close as he could come to human sentiment. The pursuit of power for its own sake was his overriding motive. Radzinsky gives a fairly conventional account of Stalin's calculated self-transformation from revolutionary into dictator dictator, originally a Roman magistrate appointed to rule the state in times of emergency; in modern usage, an absolutist or autocratic ruler who assumes extraconstitutional powers. From 501 B.C. until the abolition of the office in 44 B.C., Rome had 88 dictators. . Terror was one among other useful implements. Far from infallible in·fal·li·ble adj. 1. Incapable of erring: an infallible guide; an infallible source of information. 2. , he made shattering blunders --especially in his handling of Germany and Hitler, which made world war a certainty. In the end, terrified ter·ri·fy tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies 1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten. 2. To menace or threaten; intimidate. would-be successors apparently left him to die in a way tantamount tan·ta·mount adj. Equivalent in effect or value: a request tantamount to a demand. [From obsolete tantamount, an equivalent, from Anglo-Norman to killing him off. This book is highly readable but the last word remains as elusive as ever. |
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