Mark B. Smith teaches in the Faculty of History at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of Property of Communists and The Russia Anxiety.
Accessible and comprehensive … Smith's authentic account of Soviet life is enlivened by biographical sketches and his deep understanding of Russian culture and society * Irish Times * Deeply informed … A significant book for anybody who seeks to understand modern Russia * The Sunday Times * Smoothly readable … A fascinating chronicle of the Soviet Union … Exit Stalin offers a superb history of the rise and fall of a utopian state and its dangerously deluded ideology * Observer * Superb... Immensely important... This is a tragic story, and Smith tells it magnificently * The Telegraph * Richly detailed... Mark Smith’s impressive history gives readers a powerful sense of what it was like to live under communism in the four decades between Stalin’s death and the country’s disintegration at the end of the cold war * Financial Times * Exit Stalin asks a timely question: what is life in a non-democratic modern society actually like? Smith builds up a picture of an entire culture, a way of life, a vivid sense of an entire disappeared world and forces the question: would you accept the price? -- Owen Hatherley * New Statesman * Vivid ... Excellent ... An essential and accessible addition to the library of Soviet and post-Soviet studies * Kirkus Reviews * Meticulously researched ... For anyone interested in a dispassionate overview of the late Soviet period, it makes for fascinating reading' * The Tablet * To this enthralling journey across an archipelago of twentieth-century Russian people and situations, Smith brings deep historical knowledge, analytical prowess and formidable emotional intelligence. At the end of it you have not just learned something, you have been somewhere. Essential reading for anyone with an interest in contemporary Russia and its people -- Christopher Clark The most insightful and accurate cultural history of the Soviet Union that I have encountered, and a very good read, to boot -- Jack F. Matlock Jr.