Ten Days that Shook the World
"[John Reed] writes of it [the Russian Revolution] brilliantly and entertainingly......His familiar powers of graphic description......are here at their best"
- The New York Times Book Review"Rises above every other contemporary record for its literary power, its penetration, its command of detail ... [it will be] remembered when all others are forgotten."
- George F. KennanCo-published with International Publishing
about the bookabout
This dazzling eyewitness account of the Russian revolution takes its readers into the heart of the extraordinary events that occurred in St. Petersburg during the late fall of 1917. This new edition with a new introduction is published to coincide with the revolution's 100th anniversary.
An American journalist on assignment for the New York-based communist newspaper, The Masses, John Reed here provides a riveting account of the events that led to Lenin and the Bolsheviks seizing state power. Crackling with energetic immediacy, Reed’s chronicle is based on his days and nights walking the streets and visiting the meeting halls in a city ablaze with revolutionary fervor. His reports are crammed with urgent information gleaned from handbills, newspapers, and posters, and from talking to the soldiers, peasants and industrial workers who have flooded to the city to the join ranks of an insurgency that will storm the Tsar’s Winter Palace and declare a revolutionary government.
Lenin, who would become a close friend of Reed's, wrote of Ten Days That Shook the World: "Unreservedly do I recommend it to the workers of the world. Here is a book which I should like to see published in millions of copies and translated into all languages". With an original and extensive introduction by the acclaimed economist David Laibman, this new edition of the book that inspired both Sergei Eisenstein's movie October and Warren Beatty's Reds will bring to a fresh audience the tumultuous days of a revolution that was to change history for the century that followed.
About The Author / Editor
Preview
From David Laibman's New Introduction
The Revolution chronicled in John Reed's classic account, then, has not been deprived of its historical importance. On the contrary: if this Revolution brought forth a vision, and an early reality, of a modern, complex economy and society run by its working people, through massively democratic procedures, ensuring cooperative engagement of the resources of Planet Earth toward the ends of human development and preservation of all life, and without a predatory, unprincipled capitalist ruling class imposing its own need for power and wealth between the Planet and its working inhabitants-then that reality/vision/Revolution will only gain in historical significance, as the world’s people return to the offensive.
Those people will then need to return to John Reed's amazing account of the struggles and pain, the visions and triumphs, of their 1917 forebears who toppled a Tsarist monarchy, then stared down the country's internal bourgeois elites, the international capitalist empire-builders and invaders, and all of the "friendly" professional problem-solvers, to start off on a long and still-unwinding road to a future worthy of them-and us. I conclude that we must still read Ten Days, and learn from it, because there is so much still to be done.
From Chapter 4: The Fall of the Provisional Government
The massive facade of Smolny blazed with lights as we drove up, and from every street converged upon it streams of hurrying shapes dim in the gloom. Automobiles and motorcycles came and went; an enormous elephant-colored armored automobile, with two red flags flying from the turret, lumbered out with screaming siren. It was cold, and at the outer gate the Red Guards had built themselves a bonfire. At the inner gate, too, there was a blaze, by the light of which the sentries slowly spelled out our passes and looked us up and down.
The canvas covers had been taken off the four rapid-fire guns on each side of the doorway, and the ammunition-belts hung snakelike from their breeches. A dun herd of armored cars stood under the trees in the court-yard, engines going. The long, bare, dimly-illuminated halls roared with the thunder of feet, calling, shouting ... There was an atmosphere of recklessness. A crowd came pouring down the staircase, workers in black blouses and round black fur hats, many of them with guns slung over their shoulders, soldiers in rough dirt-colored coats and grey fur shapki pinched flat, a leader or so-Lunatcharsky, Kamenev-hurrying along in the center of a group all talking at once, with harassed anxious faces, and bulging portfolios under their arms. The extraordinary meeting of the Petrograd Soviet was over.
in the media
Ten Days that Shook the World
"[John Reed] writes of it [the Russian Revolution] brilliantly and entertainingly......His familiar powers of graphic description......are here at their best"
- The New York Times Book Review"Rises above every other contemporary record for its literary power, its penetration, its command of detail ... [it will be] remembered when all others are forgotten."
- George F. KennanCo-published with International Publishing
about the bookabout
This dazzling eyewitness account of the Russian revolution takes its readers into the heart of the extraordinary events that occurred in St. Petersburg during the late fall of 1917. This new edition with a new introduction is published to coincide with the revolution's 100th anniversary.
An American journalist on assignment for the New York-based communist newspaper, The Masses, John Reed here provides a riveting account of the events that led to Lenin and the Bolsheviks seizing state power. Crackling with energetic immediacy, Reed’s chronicle is based on his days and nights walking the streets and visiting the meeting halls in a city ablaze with revolutionary fervor. His reports are crammed with urgent information gleaned from handbills, newspapers, and posters, and from talking to the soldiers, peasants and industrial workers who have flooded to the city to the join ranks of an insurgency that will storm the Tsar’s Winter Palace and declare a revolutionary government.
Lenin, who would become a close friend of Reed's, wrote of Ten Days That Shook the World: "Unreservedly do I recommend it to the workers of the world. Here is a book which I should like to see published in millions of copies and translated into all languages". With an original and extensive introduction by the acclaimed economist David Laibman, this new edition of the book that inspired both Sergei Eisenstein's movie October and Warren Beatty's Reds will bring to a fresh audience the tumultuous days of a revolution that was to change history for the century that followed.
About The Author / Editor
Preview
From David Laibman's New Introduction
The Revolution chronicled in John Reed's classic account, then, has not been deprived of its historical importance. On the contrary: if this Revolution brought forth a vision, and an early reality, of a modern, complex economy and society run by its working people, through massively democratic procedures, ensuring cooperative engagement of the resources of Planet Earth toward the ends of human development and preservation of all life, and without a predatory, unprincipled capitalist ruling class imposing its own need for power and wealth between the Planet and its working inhabitants-then that reality/vision/Revolution will only gain in historical significance, as the world’s people return to the offensive.
Those people will then need to return to John Reed's amazing account of the struggles and pain, the visions and triumphs, of their 1917 forebears who toppled a Tsarist monarchy, then stared down the country's internal bourgeois elites, the international capitalist empire-builders and invaders, and all of the "friendly" professional problem-solvers, to start off on a long and still-unwinding road to a future worthy of them-and us. I conclude that we must still read Ten Days, and learn from it, because there is so much still to be done.
From Chapter 4: The Fall of the Provisional Government
The massive facade of Smolny blazed with lights as we drove up, and from every street converged upon it streams of hurrying shapes dim in the gloom. Automobiles and motorcycles came and went; an enormous elephant-colored armored automobile, with two red flags flying from the turret, lumbered out with screaming siren. It was cold, and at the outer gate the Red Guards had built themselves a bonfire. At the inner gate, too, there was a blaze, by the light of which the sentries slowly spelled out our passes and looked us up and down.
The canvas covers had been taken off the four rapid-fire guns on each side of the doorway, and the ammunition-belts hung snakelike from their breeches. A dun herd of armored cars stood under the trees in the court-yard, engines going. The long, bare, dimly-illuminated halls roared with the thunder of feet, calling, shouting ... There was an atmosphere of recklessness. A crowd came pouring down the staircase, workers in black blouses and round black fur hats, many of them with guns slung over their shoulders, soldiers in rough dirt-colored coats and grey fur shapki pinched flat, a leader or so-Lunatcharsky, Kamenev-hurrying along in the center of a group all talking at once, with harassed anxious faces, and bulging portfolios under their arms. The extraordinary meeting of the Petrograd Soviet was over.