this is, to my knowledge, an unique book. it's title is slightly deceptive as one could be convinced that the primary focus of the book is on the relationship between the bolsheviks and international financiers. instead of this limited scope, the author provides an insight to the final era of the russian empire, its bond default and eventual transition to the ussr by the dawn of versailles and brest litovsk. drawing from a wide corpus of sources; ranging from memoirs of bankers to the official tax register, malik sketches a vivid image of the causes for the eventual default. situating it at the end of the nineteenth century, imperial russia entered the debt markets of primarily paris, a clear case of insufficient diversification, but lacked the state capacity to generate tax revenue, signing its own death warrant. the consistent reliance on public spending driven through debt was extremely unpopular with the populace but lacking any form of democratic representation, even considering the failed first, second and eventual third duma, the government's only check were the sovereign debt markets themselves. the animosity fueled by the despotic regime was circulated first by radical magazines through the writings of lenin and trotsky then secondly and separately, vindicated or normalized by former members of the duma. when the bolsheviks eventually seized power and dissolved the empire, they ended the war but refused to consider the debt payments of the previous empire, although they doubted default as a way of gaining legitimacy to spread communism throughout the continent. clearly an eye opening book with immense wit, detail and originality.