The late Ludo Martens of the Worker's Party of Belgium presents a concise viewpoint defending Stalin on the basis of fact, and using his work to attack the enemies of Stalin. My criticisms of the book come from Martens' attack on Beria, however other ML historians seem to have refuted this well enough, remember Martens was writing in 1991, when information was harder to come by. For more concise histories by academic History professors I would recommend J. Arch Getty, Sheila Fitzpatrick and Robert Thurston. Martens' evidence against the detractors of Stalin, and analysis of the controversial elements of his regime which are attacked by bourgeois historians, from a scientific perspective, is what allows this book to shine. Stalin was an imperfect man, but he is certainly not the monster we are led to believe he was. To quote Alexander Zinoviev, a Soviet dissident from a 1990 interview, as Martens does with this book:
"I was already a confirmed anti-Stalinist at the age of seventeen .... The idea of killing Stalin filled my thoughts and feelings .... We studied the 'technical' possibilities of an attack .... We even practiced. If they had condemned me to death in 1939, their decision would have been just. I had made up a plan to kill Stalin; wasn't that a crime? When Stalin was still alive, I saw things differently, but as I look back over this century, I can state that Stalin was the greatest individual of this century, the greatest political genius. To adopt a scientific attitude about someone is quite different from one's personal attitude."