Koba the Dread

ebook Laughter and the Twenty Million

By Martin Amis

cover image of Koba the Dread

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A blistering blend of history and political reckoning, Koba the Dread is Martin Amis's searing indictment of Stalinist terror and the Western intellectuals who turned a blind eye.
A masterful fusion of personal reflection, historical narrative, and searing political insight, Koba the Dread is the worthy successor to Martin Amis's acclaimed memoir Experience.
In Koba the Dread, Amis dissects the seductive yet blood-soaked allure of Communism, a belief system that captivated and stained the twentieth century. With ruthless clarity, he tackles the most glaring hypocrisy of Western intellectuals: their indulgence in a brutal ideology that, at its core, crushed millions of lives. Amid personal revelations and familial loss, Amis delivers perhaps the most uncompromising pages ever written about Stalin—Koba the Dread, Iosif the Terrible—a portrait of a man whose cruelty was matched only by his chilling disregard for human suffering.
Amis's own father, Kingsley, once a loyal Comintern acolyte, and his close association with Robert Conquest, the distinguished Sovietologist who helped unravel the USSR's facade, serve as the dark backdrop to this memoir. These connections, fraught with irony and tragedy, add a chilling layer to the personal history Amis dissects with surgical precision.
In the face of Stalin's infamous aphorism—that the death of one is a tragedy, while the death of millions is a mere statistic—Amis offers a scathing rebuttal. Koba the Dread is not just an exploration of Soviet terror; it is a deeply personal and caustic counterpoint to the moral apathy that allowed such horrors to flourish.

Koba the Dread