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The Bystander

Books of the Week: An Enthusiast

... Mr. Mais himself. He will probably start a school of his own before long. Si, Si, The Russian Revolution Another Carlyle may arise to give 11s a Russian Revolution in all its bewilder ing panorama, but the time is not yet. Mean while eye-witnesses and ...

Published: Wednesday 12 September 1917
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 942 | Page: 40 | Tags: Review 

The Bystander Bookshelf: Innocence and Villainy

... Mr. Krivitsky is true to type. His Stalin is a monster, a kind of anti-Christ bearing much the same relation to the Russian revolution as Napoleon did to the French, but adding the traits of the Asiatic highwayman. Heavens knows Napoleon was calculating ...

Published: Wednesday 03 January 1940
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1293 | Page: 23 | Tags: Review 

The Theatre: ''Last Train South St. Martin's

... Herbert Far j eon Last Train South St. Martin's) ALTHOUGH plays, like history, are liable to repeat themselves, the Russian Revolution certainly makes a change from the French. M. le Mar- quis and Mme. la Duchesse, taking their snuff with a swagger as ...

Published: Wednesday 24 August 1938
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 576 | Page: 14 | Tags: Review 

BOOKS OF THE WEEK: WHAT JAPAN COULD DO IN SIBERIA; Japan and Siberia

... reasons, lifts the veil considerably from the course of recent events in Siberia. We have been flooded with books on the Russian Revolution, but few, if any, of them have given intimate knowledge of what has happened in Asiatic Russia. Mr. Coleman does not ...

Published: Wednesday 05 June 1918
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 773 | Page: 28 | Tags: Review 

Books of the Week: RUSSIAN COURT MEMOIRS

... much. It may be only another of those curious rumours on which we thrive to-day that Mr. Herbert Jenkins arranged the Russian Revolution as an advertisement for his anonymously issued Russian Court Memoirs: 1914-1916 (Jenkins: 125. 6d. net), but strange ...

Published: Wednesday 04 April 1917
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 895 | Page: 50 | Tags: Review 

The Literary Log

... own soul. Yes, this book is one of the few which a reviewer would gladly read twice. ...

Published: Wednesday 27 December 1922
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 912 | Page: 54 | Tags: Review 

ROCKETS

... atmosphere thickening up as you breathe it in. And so, as an ancient _ sage remarked, we go on. There is an episode of the Russian Revolution with Mr. Chas. Austin as a sentry. (Mr. Austin is Charles in the first half of the programme, but is mostly reduced ...

Published: Wednesday 22 March 1922
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1086 | Page: 27 | Tags: Review 

Up the Rebels!--and Others

... and purple-breeched soldiery in unorthodox military attitudes. Leon Trotsky sings of it, too, in The History of the Russian Revolution, Volumes II. and III. (Gollancz 18s. each), though, naturally, in a different strain. Per sonally, I prefer the musical- ...

Published: Wednesday 25 January 1933
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1170 | Page: 32 | Tags: Review 

Mr. Golding Goes Silvering

... love, became the wife of an incredible beautiful English bart., and only May was left. Then came the thunderclap of the Russian Revolution. Poleduik became right-hand man to Ulianov now called Lenin and Smirnov was financier to the counter-revolution. Susan ...

Published: Tuesday 08 May 1934
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1202 | Page: 32 | Tags: Review 

Books of the Week: NOVELS, IMPRESSIONS, AND A MEMOIR; Casuals of the Sea

... arrest of Mrs. Pankhurst in terms which some pre-War Correspondents might have used to describe some phase of the Great Russian Revolution for our consumption. And so we have I a lurid account of King George's Prisoner, in the course of which we are told ...

Published: Wednesday 12 April 1916
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1429 | Page: 38 | Tags: Review 

The Bystander Bookshelf: Yanks, Finns and Ladies

... skin or human hair in their frenzies and then cry like babbling brooks when they come round. The war comes, then the Russian revolution and the civil war this has been drastically cut, the translation having been made from an abridged German edition and ...

Published: Wednesday 13 March 1940
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1423 | Page: 36 | Tags: Review