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'One of the few books written in this epoch which will survive it' New Statesman
Arthur Koestler was born in Budapest in 1905. He attended the university of Vienna before working as a foreign correspondent in the Middle East, Berlin and Paris. For six years he was an active member of the Communist Party, and was captured by Franco in the Spanish Civil War. In 1940 he came to England. He wrote The Gladiators in Hungarian, Darkness at Noon in German, and Arrival and Departure in English. He set up the Arthur Koestler Award (now the Koestler Trust) which awards prizes for creative achievements to prisoners, detainees and patients in special hospitals. He died in 1983 by suicide, having frequently expressed a belief in the right to euthanasia.
A remarkable book, a grimly fascinating interpretation of...all
revolutionary dictatorships, and at the same time a tense and
subtly intellectualised drama of prison psychology
*Times Literary Supplement*
[Darkness At Noon] is written from terrible experience. From
knowledge of the men whose struggles of mind and body he describes.
Apart from its sociological importance, it is written with a
subtlety and an economy which class it as great literature. I have
read it twice without feeling that I have learned more than half of
what it has to offer me- Koestler approaches the problem of ends
and means, of love and truth and social organisation, through the
thoughts of an old Bolshevik, Rubashov, as he awaits death in a GPU
prison
*New Statesman*
Along with Animal Farm and 1984, this book formed part of the
essential bookshelf of those intellectuals who repudiated their
early illusions about the Soviet Union
*The Week*
It brilliantly portrays the chilling tyranny of Soviet
Communism
*The Week*
One of the few books written in this epoch which will survive
it.
*New Statesman*
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