Book Review

Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million (2002)

EW's GRADE
B-

Details Writer: Martin Amis; Genre: Nonfiction; Publisher: Talk/Miramax

  Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million, Martin Amis

The novelist's take on Sovietism is a high-end clip job in which he regurgitates the writings of historians, dissidents, and apparatchiks and briefly demonstrates the thoroughness of Stalin's evil. The second paragraph in Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million mentions that, during the enforced famine of 1933, horse manure was a staple of some peasant diets. Things get worse from there. Though the catalog of atrocities is duly atrocious, there is no fresh thesis, and Amis' autobiographical intrusions -- about the comsymp youth of his famous father, the leftism of his friend Christopher Hitchens, and the death of his middle-aged sister -- fit poorly with his discussion of purges and prison camps. This odd volume has the flavor of an exercise, of an imaginer of comic dystopias immersing himself in unimaginable horror.

Originally posted Jul 23, 2002 Published in issue #664 Jul 26, 2002 Order article reprints

Add your comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk * indicates a required field.

500 characters remaining
Advertisement