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Paul M. Levitt

    Cet auteur explore les aspects les plus sombres de la nature humaine, se concentrant souvent sur le monde criminel et son impact sur la société. Ses œuvres se caractérisent par des explorations perspicaces de la psychologie des personnages et des récits captivants qui plongent le lecteur dans un monde d'intrigue et d'ambiguïté morale. Son expérience universitaire lui offre une perspective unique pour examiner les motivations et les conséquences.

    Death at the Dacha
    • Death at the Dacha

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      As Stalin lies dying, this novel records his last thoughts, which he renders as a movie about the people he believes envenomed his life, namely, Lenin and certain women. (A film devotee, Stalin so loved movies that some scholars have even suggested that he governed the Soviet empire by cinematocracy, rule by cinema.) He has suffered a stroke but will linger for three days before dying. As in a film, he revisits scenes and old arguments with Lenin, and then endures a trial over his charge that women have poisoned his life. At the conclusion of the trial, Stalin's mind screen returns to V.I. Lenin. What follows then is Stalin's concluding mockery and denunciation of Lenin; Lenin's final assessment of Stalin; and the end of the novel: Stalin's dying words.

      Death at the Dacha