Anne O'Donnell is assistant professor of history and Russian and Slavic studies at New York University.
""[A] powerful and illuminating account of how people lost and laid claim to things – apartments, household items and other personal possessions – in revolutionary Moscow. . . . O’Donnell’s calm analysis of the phases of revolutionary dispossession makes compelling reading. The book also contains some surprises even for readers under no illusions about the chaos and coercion of early Bolshevik Russia.""---Stephen Lovell, Times Literary Supplement ""One of the most thought-provoking and well-researched books on the Russian Revolution and is essential reading to understand the revolutionary experience.""---Aaron B. Retish, The Russian Review