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This I cannot forget : the memoirs of Nikolai Bukharin's widow / Anna Larina ; introduction by Stephen F. Cohen ; translated from the Russian by Gary Kern.

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Summary language: Russian Publication details: New York : W.W. Norton & Co., c1993.Description: 384 p., [22] p. of plates : ill. ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 0393030253 :
Uniform titles:
  • Nezabyvaemoe. English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 947.084/092 20
LOC classification:
  • DK268.B76 N4913 1993
Contents:
Introduction: The afterlife of Nikolai Bukharin / Stephen F. Cohen -- This I cannot forget. The Tomsk Camp, December 1937 -- March 1938. Transit prisons. Mothers and babies in prison. Wives of political prisoners. Mothers of disgraced sons. How Stalin toyed with Bukharin -- The Bukharin trial. A nightmare. The fate of her child and memories of a happier Siberian journey. The underground cell. Vision of Golgotha. The Rightist and Trotskyist oppositions. With Bukharin in the Crimea, 1930. Bukharin's conversation with Kamenev and its fateful consequences, 1928-1929. Bukharin's character and ideals. A letter to Yezhov and a poem for Yura. Our romance, Stalin's wife, and premonitions. Deeper into the Gulag. Return to life -- And to Moscow. Last months in Moscow after Bukharin's arrest. Exile in Astrakhan, 1937. The Astrakhan Prison, 1937 -- Moscow's Lubyanka Prison, 1938. Confrontation with Beria. Portrait of Father. Childhood friendship with Bukharin. Lenin's death, Father's death, and new cellmates. Memories of Trotsky, and a disturbing interrogation in the Lubyanka. Bukharin's last months of freedom: The Paris trip. The "letter of an old bolshevik" and other supposed "recollections" of Bukharin in Paris. The storm descends: Stalin and Bukharin. Bukharin's confrontation with Sokolnikov. Radek's arrest and testimony. "I have returned from Hell" -- Bukharin, January 1937. Reunion with Yura in 1956. The last plenum and Bukharin's hunger strike. The last good-bye and the first search. Bukharin's arrest. Bukharin's testament -- Epilogue: I always believed that the truth would triumph -- Bukharin's prison letter to Anna Larina, delivered 54 years later -- Letters from Soviet readers.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books (30-Day Checkout) Books (30-Day Checkout) Nash Library General Stacks DK268.B76N4913 1993 1 Available 33710000094362

Translation of Nezabyvaemoe.

Includes index.

WAR, NEWBERY,

Introduction: The afterlife of Nikolai Bukharin / Stephen F. Cohen -- This I cannot forget. The Tomsk Camp, December 1937 -- March 1938. Transit prisons. Mothers and babies in prison. Wives of political prisoners. Mothers of disgraced sons. How Stalin toyed with Bukharin -- The Bukharin trial. A nightmare. The fate of her child and memories of a happier Siberian journey. The underground cell. Vision of Golgotha. The Rightist and Trotskyist oppositions. With Bukharin in the Crimea, 1930. Bukharin's conversation with Kamenev and its fateful consequences, 1928-1929. Bukharin's character and ideals. A letter to Yezhov and a poem for Yura. Our romance, Stalin's wife, and premonitions. Deeper into the Gulag. Return to life -- And to Moscow. Last months in Moscow after Bukharin's arrest. Exile in Astrakhan, 1937. The Astrakhan Prison, 1937 -- Moscow's Lubyanka Prison, 1938. Confrontation with Beria. Portrait of Father. Childhood friendship with Bukharin. Lenin's death, Father's death, and new cellmates. Memories of Trotsky, and a disturbing interrogation in the Lubyanka. Bukharin's last months of freedom: The Paris trip. The "letter of an old bolshevik" and other supposed "recollections" of Bukharin in Paris. The storm descends: Stalin and Bukharin. Bukharin's confrontation with Sokolnikov. Radek's arrest and testimony. "I have returned from Hell" -- Bukharin, January 1937. Reunion with Yura in 1956. The last plenum and Bukharin's hunger strike. The last good-bye and the first search. Bukharin's arrest. Bukharin's testament -- Epilogue: I always believed that the truth would triumph -- Bukharin's prison letter to Anna Larina, delivered 54 years later -- Letters from Soviet readers.