|    Login    |    Register

Dictator Literature: A History of Despots Through Their Writing

(Hardback)

Available Formats


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Dictator Literature: A History of Despots Through Their Writing

Contributors:

By (Author) Daniel Kalder

ISBN:

9781786070586

Publisher:

Oneworld Publications

Imprint:

Oneworld Publications

Publication Date:

1st July 2018

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Political structures: totalitarianism and dictatorship
Political leaders and leadership

Dewey:

809.933581

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

400

Dimensions:

Width 146mm, Height 225mm

Description

Few may realise that the leader of Turkmenistan a man who once renamed bread after his own mother wrote his own holy book, which is required reading before taking a driving test. It is a book of such time-quaking importance that the month of September was renamed in its honour. Countless historians have dedicated decades of their lives to minutely detailing the atrocities perpetrated by the twentieth centurys most notorious dictators. And yet one area of tyrannical infamy has been shockingly neglected these mens crimes against literature. Between them, they produced theoretical works, spiritual manifestos, poetry collections, memoirs and even the occasional romance novel, establishing a literary tradition of soul-crushing tedium that continues to this day.What do these books reveal about the dictatorial soul How did the production of literature become central to the running of their regimes A journey to the end of the literary night, combining mind-bending explorations of the avant-garde of boredom with history, politics and biography and leavened with a darkly humorous wit Dictator Literature is the true story of the worst books in the world.

Reviews

Daniel Kalder has slogged his way through the 20th centurys Krakatoa-like eruption of despotic verbiage so you dont have to: from Lenin to Mao to Kim Jong-il and Saddam Hussein, via Turkmenbashis outrageous Book of the Soul, once required reading for driving tests in Turkmenistan. Kalders dispatches from the transnational empire of ultra-boredom are not only very funny, they also form a quirky, pacey guide to recent world history.

* Sunday Times, Books of the Year *

This wonderfully entertaining book is a cautionary tale about how societies are easily wooed by foolish demagogues spouting gibberish.

* The Times, Books of the Year *

I enjoyed this book a great dealits actually a rather snappy read.

* Will Self, Guardian *

Full ofwonders, and startling individual factsAn overwhelmingly powerful reminder of 20th-century misrule, and of just how delusional human beings can be especially if theyre literate.

* Telegraph *

Hugely compellingLike coming across a planet-sized car crash, with hundreds of millions snarled up in the wreckage: you cant look away. Kalder has really dug deep into the minds of these infernal texts creators, and thus delivers some truly enlightening insights.

* Irish Independent *

Daniel Kalderdeserves a medalDictator Literature is a great book...An insightful book, but also a funny one.'

* The Times *

Very funnyAfter reading Dictator Literature you will never look at books with such a benevolent eye again.

* Spectator *

A engaging, brisk, and morbidly humorous haul of the lives and literary pretensions of the murderous wingnuts who defined a century.

* Irish Times *

Kalder's book is an informative, lively and often hilarious account of some of the worst authors who ever lived, doubling as a history of the terrible ideologies that marred the last century. Some execrable books have come out of communism and fascism, but Dictator Literature is certainly not one of them.

* Catholic Herald *

A fascinating studypartly an enjoyable romp but mostly a sombre sidelong-glance history of 20th-century totalitarianism.

* Sunday Telegraph *

Brisk, and full of antic fun.

* New Statesman *

Highly readable.

* Herald *

A mesmerizing study of books by despots great and small, from the familiar to the largely unknown.

* Washington Post *

Kalder is our cheeky and irreverent guide to the (generally aggressively tedious) prose by historys despots.

* Tatler *

This is about the most discomforting book Ive read in the past year. Never mind Trump and never mind Twitter: Kalder demonstrates that words themselves, and the escapist spells we weave with them, are our riskiest civic gift.

-- Simon Ings, author of Stalin and the Scientists

A compelling examination of why bad minds create bad writing, and therefore a valuable read for anyone interested in literature or the world, in fact. Kalders dry humour makes Dictator Literature a fun tour de force through the mad history of the 20th century and the present.

-- Norman Ohler, author of Blitzed

Author Bio

Daniel Kalder is the author of Lost Cosmonaut and Strange Telescopes. He is also a journalist who has contributed to Esquire, the Guardian, The Times, the Dallas Morning News and many other publications. Originally from Fife, Scotland, he lived in Moscow for ten years and currently resides in Central Texas.

See all

Other titles by Daniel Kalder

See all

Other titles from Oneworld Publications