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October: The Story of the Russian Revolution Kindle Edition
In a panoramic sweep, stretching from St Petersburg and Moscow to the remotest villages of a sprawling empire, Mi�ville uncovers the catastrophes, intrigues and inspirations of 1917, in all their passion, drama and strangeness. Intervening in long-standing historical debates, but told with the reader new to the topic especially in mind, here is a breathtaking story of humanity at its greatest and most desperate; of a turning point for civilisation that still resonates loudly today.
China Mi�ville tells the extraordinary story of this pivotal moment in history.
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Review
“An inspirational account that lends itself to troubled times.” – Observer
“An exciting account of the revolutionary moment... well-argued and elegiac” – Spectator
“In October, Miéville provides an introduction to one of the seminal events of the 20th century — the overthrow of the Romanov dynasty and the establishment of the world’s first communist state 100 years ago this year … It has all the makings of a novel, and Miéville’s narrative builds toward its crescendo as the Bolsheviks prepare to take power.” – Boston Globe
“As an outstanding piece of literature, China Miéville’s October belongs on the same shelf as John Reed’s eyewitness classic Ten Days That Shook the World, but even more it belongs in the hands of activists who will be shaking the world in the twenty-first century.” – Paul Le Blanc, International Socialist Review
“Even though you know the ending, this is a compulsive page-turner that makes the period come alive in rich, colourful detail. Although he is better known for his science fiction, Miéville’s eye here fleshes out both the spirit of revolution and the horrors that followed. His feelings are evidently complex, which leads to a narrative that draws out elements often left out of more traditional renderings of the Revolution.” – Times Higher Education
"October, by the British author China Miéville, is a gripping account of the Russian Revolution that offers the pleasures and rewards of a great novel… The book has vividly drawn characters, high drama, suspense, and an irresistible narrative momentum that sweeps the reader along from the first page to the tragic – but not inevitable – conclusion...a masterful work.” George de Stefano, Pop Matters
“China Miéville’s literary retelling—made to feel like a novel, but scrupulously sourced to real events—captures the vertigo of 1917’s encounter between massive historical forces, plunging us back into the heart of a far-reaching social upheaval, in which time flowed backward and forward even as it marched inexorably forward toward a future that was radically unknown.” – David Sessions, The New Republic
“Miéville's understanding of the intricacies and underlying absurdities of party politics is unmatched…A rich and compelling book.” – Dallas Morning News
“This is a very fine book — in some ways, I believe, the best work that China Miéville has produced since the three thick volumes of the Bas-Lag trilogy. Indeed, October bears, in certain respects, a deeper affinity to those novels than to anything else he has published since; and it thus provides a convenient opportunity to take stock of the Miéville oeuvre to date...That [October] is an excellent work of art there is no doubt whatever.” – Carl Freedman, Los Angeles Review of Books
“October’s dramatic narrative makes the case that the effort is still worth it — that we must dare to dream, even if we risk conjuring more nightmares in this darkening world.” – Alci Rengifo, Los Angeles Review of Books
“A century on, the nature of the Russian Revolution remains hotly contested, both within and outside of leftist circles. Miéville, a master storyteller, makes a powerful case in his first nonfiction work that the Bolsheviks’ October success should not be disavowed as the onset of disaster but looked to as an inspirational moment in a grand narrative of human liberation.” – Publishers Weekly
“The story is old but Miéville retells it with verve and empathy. He brilliantly captures the tensions of coup and counter-coup and the kaleidoscope of coalitions that formed and then broke.” – Guardian
“Miéville sifts through the extraordinary disagreements, debates, and debacles that accompanied the Russian reds on every step of the road to revolution … He's especially evocative when he chronicles the scenes on the chaotic streets. But much of the value of October comes in his mastery of how the intricacies of human decision-making play out in Petrograd, Moscow, and beyond.” – Christian Science Monitor
“Miéville, known for his extravagantly weird science fiction and fantasy, is a virtuosic storyteller; here he conjures a society convulsing on the verge of total transformation while staying squarely within the lines of the historical record. Reading this blow-by-blow account of revolution now, when political life is stranger than any fiction, is galvanizing.” – Roger White, Artsy
“There is interest in reading the story of 'that violent and incomparable year' told by one who hopes against hope that it could happen again.” – Rob Doyle, Irish Times
“[An] engaging retelling of the events that rocked the foundations of the twentieth century.” – Village Voice
“There are workers, there are peasants, there are soldiers, there are parties, there are tsars, there are courtiers. Each of them bears his or her class position, his or her economic and other concerns, but it is the political field itself, how it hurls its protagonists into combat, combat with its own rules and norms, its own criteria for success and failure, that is front and center here. This may be the most textured, most concrete, account of what political contest and political combat, literal and metaphoric, feels like.” – Corey Robin, author of The Reactionary Mind: Conservatism from Edmund Burke to Sarah Palin
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B06Y28BN5C
- Publisher : Verso (9 May 2017)
- Language : English
- File size : 4.6 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 462 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: 154,846 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- 106 in Historical Reference
- 118 in History of Russia eBooks
- 143 in Political History of Revolutions & Coups
- Customer reviews:
About the author

China Miéville lives and works in London. He is three-time winner of the prestigious Arthur C. Clarke Award (Perdido Street Station, Iron Council and The City & The City) and has also won the British Fantasy Award twice (Perdido Street Station and The Scar). The City & The City, an existential thriller, was published in 2009 to dazzling critical acclaim and drew comparison with the works of Kafka and Orwell (The Times) and Philip K. Dick (Guardian).
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book provides a decent overview of the Russian revolution, with one review noting how it captures the excitement of the period. Moreover, the book is written like a novel, making it a thrilling read.
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Customers appreciate the historical accuracy of the book, describing it as a decent overview of the Russian revolution with good detail, and one customer notes how it captures the excitement of the period.
"...Written like a novel, history proves enthralling, vivid." Read more
"Historically accurate but written as a novel. Capturing all the exitement of the period...." Read more
"...I wasn't disappointed. Superbly written, incredible research and detail; completely engaging." Read more
"A gripping tale well told. Moves with the speed and attention to detail of a revolutionary locomotive." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a thrilling and brilliant novel-like narrative.
"...Written like a novel, history proves enthralling, vivid." Read more
"Historically accurate but written as a novel. Capturing all the exitement of the period...." Read more
"...I wasn't disappointed. Superbly written, incredible research and detail; completely engaging." Read more
"another great book by the ever reliable China Mieville, even if non fiction" Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 June 2017With an already extensive knowledge of Russian History, particularly the revolution, this book joins all the dots. Filling in gaps of information and reasoning the questions I had about the chain of events. Written like a novel, history proves enthralling, vivid.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 June 2017Historically accurate but written as a novel. Capturing all the exitement of the period. In the centenary of the 1917 revolution this is a welcome addition.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 November 2017I was apprehensive about this as I had only previously read his new weird stuff. I wasn't disappointed. Superbly written, incredible research and detail; completely engaging.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 June 2023Audio CD arrived fairly promptly and was in good condition. I played it through and discovered that the author had been a little too obsessive about detail. Time and again when the thrust of great events needed conveying with energy he stopped off to give us the exact numbers of votes cast by each section of those gathered. What was wanted was much more of the 'man-on-the-street's' immediate experience of (say) a march, a confrontation with cossacks, the pursuit of the Tzar etc and much less of a revolt conducted in minute detail by endless wordy motions. The writer clearly knew his stuff and is (I'm sure)
accurate in the fine detail but this CD is crying out for a leavening of the emotion of the times. It's not bad, just rather wearing.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 May 2017I could not put this book down. I've tried 10 Days that Shook the World but got a bit lost in all the different factions and groupings. But Mieville has a knack for making it all digestible - and that brings the excitement of the quickly unfurling events to the fore. There are some wonderful touches that made me laugh out loud as I read - particularly his descriptions of Kerensky's histrionics. I think I'm ready for Reed's classic now.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 November 2019another great book by the ever reliable China Mieville, even if non fiction
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 December 2017A gripping tale well told. Moves with the speed and attention to detail of a revolutionary locomotive.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 January 2018Bought for Christmas Present. I have been told its a very interesting read..
Top reviews from other countries
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OkonkwoReviewed in Germany on 27 October 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Großartig
Ob als historisches Werk, als narratives Werk oder gar als Vorbereitung auf den kommenden Aufstand einfach nur großartig, absolut lesenswert!
- magariReviewed in the United States on 30 July 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding achievement.
The audience for this book is more people interested in politics, history, Russia, and Marxism rather than the average reader of Mieville's fiction (I personally fit in both boxes). It's a very well researched and told story of the revolution, and a particularly good telling for those people who do not already have detailed knowledge of the characters and events. Additionally, Mieville manages to subvert a lot of the common narratives of the revolution. Lenin appears throughout the book, but his agency here is (rightly) downplayed. Instead, the revolution appears to be the product of acts of circumstance and fortune, along with various soldiers' brigades who prove irrepressible. Indeed, one of the most interesting dynamics here is between the Bolsheviks and the soldiers they represent. Who is really leading who? Furthermore, we see how the Bolsheviks are internally fractured. This is not a one-man, or one-party show, but a messy complex of actors.
Lastly, the book is a slow burn and by necessity involves a lot of exposition (of characters, of groups, of committees). It really picks up midway, when Kornilov's army threatens to destroy the revolution, and peaks in the final chapter when events poise on a knife's edge. The reader's persistence really pays off. Actually, I'm in awe of Mieville's ability to translate his research and the ungodly mess of characters and events into a highly readable book.
- Eric M GaufReviewed in Canada on 11 June 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars History well-told
The story of 1917, of the fall of the Tsar and the rise of not one but several new governments, is a complex web whose story is well-told here. The book makes no claims to be a complete account, but rather a narrative intended to spark interest and further exploration, and in this it succeeds admirably.
As with all stories, the choice of where to end is deliberate, intentional, and leaves the reader wanting more. The serpentine path that saw V. I. Ulyanov take the lead at the end of October 1917 is mapped out, and so many small decisions, misunderstandings and opportunities are shown in the context of that eventual outcome.
All of this is done with Miéville's flair for language, his precise artistry with words pulling you in and driving you onwards.
- DiggerDawsonReviewed in Australia on 11 January 2018
3.0 out of 5 stars Heavy going, but a great work nonetheless.
So many characters, so many coalitions with Russian names and abbreviations. This makes any attempt to narrate the Russian revolution hard work for the reader. Nevertheless, China Mieville makes good on the promise of a short history of the political processes that led to the Bolshevik victory, temporary even though it was.
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Amazon カスタマーReviewed in Japan on 14 September 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars ロシアの十月物語
ピューリタン革命、フランス革命に次ぐ、しかしブルジョア革命をスキップした社会主義革命の課題を背負ったロシア革命の、前史から1917年1月以降の革命勢力の動向を細かく具体的に資料に即して描いているのが、珍しく、興味深い。ただ、当の10月になると日々の動きが細かすぎて、読むものの気持ちが先を急ぐので歯がゆい思いをした。例えば、ケレンスキーの人物像は比較的はっきり出ているが、レニンについては、かれがどうしてあのように常人には見えない体制転覆の可能性を読み取りえたのかの説明が欲しかった気がする。しかし、これは他の著作によるべきで、本書は、各時期の普通のに日常生活を営む人々の目に見えていた小さな風景と情景の展開ーーそれが実は、大きな物語としては人類の歴史の転換点をなすイヴェントの虫眼鏡像であったーーという面から記述したものと理解すべきだろう。