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Victor Sebestyen

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Victor Sebestyen


Born
Budapest, Hungary
Genre


Victor Sebestyen was born in Budapest and was only an infant when his family left Hungary. He has worked for many British newspapers, including the Evening Standard. He lives in England.

Average rating: 4.27 · 6,458 ratings · 781 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Lenin the Dictator

4.25 avg rating — 2,758 ratings — published 2017 — 33 editions
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Revolution 1989: The Fall o...

4.35 avg rating — 1,543 ratings — published 2009 — 4 editions
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Budapest: Between East and ...

4.30 avg rating — 758 ratings — published 2022 — 11 editions
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1946: The Making of the Mod...

4.20 avg rating — 746 ratings — published 2014 — 24 editions
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Twelve Days: The Story of t...

4.23 avg rating — 593 ratings — published 2006 — 22 editions
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The Russian Revolution

3.97 avg rating — 61 ratings5 editions
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Weimar: The Years Democracy...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — expected publication 2026 — 2 editions
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More books by Victor Sebestyen…
Quotes by Victor Sebestyen  (?)
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“Within two years of Lenin’s edict more than thirty bishops and 1,200 priests had been killed and thousands more jailed.”
Victor Sebestyen, Lenin the Dictator

“Lenin thought himself an idealist. He was not a monster, a sadist or vicious. In personal relationships he was invariably kind and behaved in the way he was brought up, like an upper-middle-class gentleman. He was not vain. He could laugh – even, occasionally, at himself. He was not cruel: unlike Stalin, Mao Zedong or Hitler he never asked about the details of his victims’ deaths, savouring the moment. To him, in any case, the deaths were theoretical, mere numbers. He never donned uniforms or military-style tunics as other dictators favoured. But during his years of feuding with other revolutionaries, and then maintaining his grip on power, he never showed generosity to a defeated opponent or performed a humanitarian act unless it was politically expedient.”
Victor Sebestyen, Lenin: The Man, the Dictator, and the Master of Terror

“In his quest for power, he promised people anything and everything. He offered simple solutions to complex problems. He lied unashamedly. He identified a scapegoat he could later label ‘enemies of the people’. He justified himself on the basis that winning meant everything: the ends justified the means. Anyone who has lived through recent elections in the supposedly sophisticated political cultures of the West might recognise him. Lenin was the godfather of what commentators a century after his time call ‘post-truth politics’.”
Victor Sebestyen, Lenin: The Man, the Dictator, and the Master of Terror



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