Red Plenty

6,00 

by Francis Spufford

By the award-winning (and famously unpredictable) author of The Child That Books Built and Backroom Boys, Red Plenty is as ambitious as Sputnik, as uncompromising as an Aeroflot flight attendant – and as different from what you were expecting as a glass of Soviet champagne.

 

 

1 in stock

Description

Once upon a time in the Soviet Union….

Strange as it may seem, the grey, oppressive USSR was founded on a fairytale. It was built on the twentieth-century magic called ‘the planned economy’, which was going to gush forth an abundance of good things that lands of capitalism could never match. And just for a little while, in the heady years of the late 1950’s, the magic seemed to be working.

Red Plenty is about that moment in history, and how it came, and how it went away; about the brief era when, under the rash leadership of Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet Union looked forward to a future of rich communists and envious capitalists, when Moscow would out-glitter Manhattan, and every Lada would be better engineered than a Porsche. It’s about the scientists who did their genuinely brilliant best to make the dream come true, it give the tyranny its happy ending. It’s history, it’s fiction. It’s a comedy of ideas, and a novel about the cost of ideas.

Additional information

Book Condition

Used – Good

Cover

Hardcover

Size

434 pages

Published

August 19, 2010 by Faber and Faber

Genre

Nonfiction, Economics, Historical, History, Politics

Awards

The Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize Nominee (2011)

Red Plenty

6,00 

1 in stock