Beck (F.) and W. Godin. Russian Purge

£325

and The Extraction of Confession
London, Hurst & Blackett, 1951.

First UK edition, first impression. 8vo. Original cloth. Dust-jacket.

A descriptive study of the Russian purges of 1936–39 drawn from numerous personal experiences by a Soviet historian and a German scientist writing under pseudonyms, outlining the anatomy of the purge process including methods of selecting victims, securing denunciations, fabricating charges, and extracting confessions. The authors were Fritz Houtermans, a German physicist who had fled to the USSR and been imprisoned by the NKVD, and Konstantin Shteppa, a Kiev University historian who had been Houtermans’s cellmate; they used pseudonyms to protect their friends and colleagues still in the USSR.

“Horne worked as a foreign correspondent for The Daily Telegraph from 1952 to 1955, stationed in Berlin. In 1953, he was recruited by MI6 and used his job as a journalist as a cover for his spying. He left the world of espionage for history when he was sacked from the Telegraph in 1955, allegedly for offending the wife of the chairman of the newspaper”. (Wikipedia)

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